This folder was created in May 2021 to begin to organize information scattered in varous locations.
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- Up one level
- 'Boys & Sex' Reveals That Young Men Feel 'Cut Off From Their Hearts'
Fresh Air, with Terry Gross, Jan 7, 2020
Author Peggy Orenstein's new book, Boys & Sex, is based on extensive interviews with more than 100 college and college-bound boys and young men across the U.S. between the ages of 16 and 22 on intimacy, consent and navigating masculinity. They spanned a broad range of races, religions, classes and sexual orientations.
- 'Girls & Sex' And The Importance Of Talking To Young Women About Pleasure (37 min)
Fresh Air, with Terry Gross, March 29, 2016
While researching her new book, Girls & Sex, Peggy Orenstein spoke with more than 70 young women between the ages of 15 and 20 about their attitudes and early experiences with the full range of physical intimacy.
She says that pop culture and pornography sexualize young women by creating undue pressure to look and act sexy. These pressures affect both the sexual expectations that girls put on themselves and the expectations boys project onto them.
- Americans are having less sex — and researchers want to know why (9:26)
Tonya Mosley and Samantha Raphelson, WBUR, March 31, 2022
One of the most comprehensive sex studies to date — the National Survey of Sexual Health and Behavior — found evidence of declines in all types of partnered sexual activity in the U.S. Over the course of the study from 2009 to 2018, those surveyed reported declines in penile-vaginal intercourse, anal sex and partnered masturbation.
- Changes in Penile-Vaginal Intercourse Frequency and Sexual Repertoire from 2009 to 2018: Findings from the National Survey of Sexual Health and Behavior
Herbenick, D., Rosenberg, M., Golzarri-Arroyo, L. et al. Changes in Penile-Vaginal Intercourse Frequency and Sexual Repertoire from 2009 to 2018: Findings from the National Survey of Sexual Health and Behavior. Arch Sex Behav 51, 1419–1433 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-021-02125-2
- Daring To Date During The Delta Variant
NPR, 1A, 8/26/2021
Even before the pandemic, getting (and staying) in a relationship had its challenges. Now there’s the added task of navigating things like vaccination status, mask mandates, and the social anxiety that comes after a long lockdown.
Host Jenn White.Guests
Aida Manduley, LCSW, therapist; sexuality educator
Logan Ury, behavioral scientist; director of relationship science, Hinge; author "How to Not Die Alone: The Surprising Science That Will Help You Find Love”
Carrie Lee Riggins, former New York City ballet dancer
Solomon Missouri, minister
An earlier program on this topic is at https://the1a.org/segments/we-couldnt-help-but-wonder-love-in-the-time-of-coronavirus/
- Embodied Radio Program
Hosted by Anita Rao for WUNC Radio. The Embodied Podcast is at https://www.wunc.org/podcast/embodied-podcast. Example episodes:
The Lasting Legacy of the Abstinence Pledge
Parenting Beyond The Gender Binary
No Strings Attached
“Dear Embodied”: Breakup Advice for the Brokenhearted
Unlocking the Mysteries of the Pelvic Floor
Polyamory and Love Beyond the Relationship Binary
A moment for menopause
Behind the Scenes of Between the Sheets: The Making of a Sex Scene
More Than Blood: Science, Culture and Equity In Menstruation
- Guttmacher Institute
The Guttmacher Institute was founded in 1968 as the Center for Family Planning Program Development. The Center was originally housed within the corporate structure of Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA). Its program, however, was independently developed and overseen by a National Advisory Council separate from the PPFA Board of Directors. Its early development was nurtured by Alan F. Guttmacher, an eminent obstetrician-gynecologist, author and leader in reproductive rights who was PPFA's president for more than a decade until his death in 1974.
- Kinsey Institute, Indiana University
Founded in 1947, by Alfred Kinsey, the Kinsey Institute engages in research, outreach, education, and historical preservation to promote greater understanding of human sexuality and relationships.
- Navigating the "sexual wilderness": the sexual liberation movement at the University of North Carolina, 1969-1973
Kelly Morrow, UNC Chapel Hill Department of History, Masters Thesis, May 2006, DOI: https://doi.org/10.17615/97kw-sm70
Abstract
This thesis asks how the "sexual liberation movement," which emerged at the nexus of the sexual revolution, the New Left, and women's liberation, began, took shape, and affected students on the campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill between 1969 and 1973. Although today many people associate the sixties and seventies with sexual anarchy, an analysis of this movement reveals that its leaders saw it as bringing order to young people's sexual lives. Galvanized by the lack of sexual information and products available to students during the 1960s, female and male faculty members and students came together in the early 1970s to develop discourses and services that taught an ethic of responsibility and promoted gender equality. In doing so, the movement's leaders at this southern university rose to national prominence, and their innovative programs became models for hundreds of other schools throughout America.
- NC SEXCON
The North Carolina Sexual Health Conference promotes interdisciplinary coordination among members of advocacy, clinical care, education, human/social services and research, to share innovative approaches, best practices and practical applications for the enhancement of sexual health across the lifespan in North Carolina. NC SEXCON was founded by Tanya Bass (see Personalities folder).
- Personalities
- Science Friday: So You Think You Know About Sex (12:48)
June 3, 2022
Radio producer Shoshannah Buxbaum talks with author Rachel Feltman, executive editor of Popular Science, about her new book, Been There, Done That: A Rousing History. Includes transcript.
- Sex and the Student Body, 2012 dissertation by Kelly Morrow (download link)
Sex and the Student Body: Knowledge, Equality, and the Sexual Revolution, 1960 to 1973. Kelly Morrow, doctoral dissertation in the UNC Department of History, under the direction of Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, 2012. See https://cdr.lib.unc.edu/concern/dissertations/br86b4223 for citation and metadata.
- Sexual and gender identity and preference
- Sexuality education
- SIECUS: Sex Ed for Social Change
Dr. Mary S. Calderone founded SIECUS, the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the U.S., in 1964.
- Victor Schoenbach MSPH fieldwork report and major paper
Vic's "scrapbook" has links to his Health Education master's paper on "The Negative Health Consequences of Traditional Sexuality Morality" and his two-part (1973, 1974) report, "Sex and Mental Health Education on the UNC Campus: a report of my fieldwork activities to date and future plans”. There are also links to the Southern Oral History Program (SOHP) project by the fall 2013 SOHP Interns on the sexual revolution of the 1970s at UNC-CH.
- Women
- z - See also UNC Chapel Hill | History | Sexuality