Publication

How intersectional constructions of sexuality, culture, and masculinity shape identities and sexual decision-making among men who have sex with men in coastal Kenya

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Last modified
  • 05/22/2025
Type of Material
Authors
    Miriam Midoun, Brown UniversitySylvia Shangani, Brown UniversityBibi Mbete, Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)Shadrack Babu, Kenya Govt Med Res CtrMelissa Hackman, Emory UniversityElise van der Elst, Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)Eduard J. Sanders, Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI)Adrian Smith, University of OxfordDon Operario, Brown University
Language
  • English
Date
  • 2016-01-01
Publisher
  • Taylor & Francis Online
Publication Version
Copyright Statement
  • © 2015 Taylor & Francis.
Final Published Version (URL)
Title of Journal or Parent Work
Volume
  • 18
Issue
  • 6
Start Page
  • 625
End Page
  • 638
Grant/Funding Information
  • Funding was provided by the John Fell Foundation (University of Oxford), the US National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (grants P01-AA019072 and U24-AA022000), and the US National Institute for Child Health and Human Development (grant R24 HD077976).
Abstract
  • Men who have sex with men are increasingly recognised as one of the most vulnerable HIV risk groups in Kenya. Sex between men is highly stigmatised in Kenya, and efforts to provide sexual health services to men who have sex with men require a deeper understanding of their lived experiences; this includes how such men in Kenya construct their sexual identities and how these constructions affect sexual decision-making. Adult self-identified men who have sex with men (n = 26) in Malindi, Kenya, participated in individual interviews to examine sociocultural processes influencing sexual identity construction and decision-making. Four key themes were identified: (1) tensions between perceptions of ‘homosexuality’ versus being ‘African’, (2) gender-stereotyped beliefs about sexual positioning, (3) socioeconomic status and limitations to personal agency and (4) objectification and commodification of non-normative sexualities. Findings from this analysis emphasise the need to conceive of samesex sexuality and HIV risk as context-dependent social phenomena. Multiple sociocultural axes were found to converge and shape sexual identity and sexual decision-making among this population. These axes and their interactive effects should be considered in the design of future interventions and other public health programmes for men who have sex with men in this region.
Author Notes
Keywords
Research Categories
  • Anthropology, Medical and Forensic
  • Gender Studies
  • Geography
  • Anthropology, Cultural
  • Health Sciences, Public Health

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