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For the record, research to examine sex
Susan Pietrzyk
February 08, 2009
Back in November,
I organized and was part of a discussion forum that explored the
topic of sexual vulnerabilities as well as some of the challenges
associated with conducting research concerning sex/sexuality.
I provided introductory comments from the perspective of being an
anthropologist interested in the ways HIV/AIDS has transformed spaces
to understand and speak about sex. Emphasizing that in most African
countries, HIV transmission happens through sex; thus, for nearly
30 years knowledge generated about HIV and AIDS is also knowledge
about sex, sexuality, sexual orientation, sexual identities, sexual
subjectivities, and sexual vulnerabilities.
Six distinct,
yet related, concepts
interwoven into human sexual potential. A potential which extends
beyond the act of sex and serves as a path through which individuals
embody, express, and experience sexual desires and sexual selves.
Like most human attributes, sex is such that societal dynamics and
life experiences, both pleasurable and painful, shape the ways sexual
potential is embraced - as individuals, in perceptions of
others, and in relationships with others.
With this background,
each of the panelists spoke about projects they are working on.
Through poetry, fiction, and qualitative social science research
methods, the panelists highlighted the ways sexualities -
how they are understood and practiced as well as emotionally lived
and dynamically not static - contain layered sets of meanings
and complications. Following the presentations, the audience engaged
in a lively discussion. Repeatedly people commented that there are
not enough spaces for people to speak about sex. Yet also, noting
that on the ground experience, through for example, NGO programming,
family counseling, or field-based research, indicates that Zimbabweans
are eager and searching for opportunities to speak about sex.
Equally, discussions
focused on issues interlocked to sex, such as concurrent partnerships,
marriage, HIV/AIDS, condoms, and violence/abuse. Notable was the
attention given to unraveling what concurrent partnering involves,
namely a (connected) network of sexual activity. Or the idea that
when a husband or wife has sex with someone other than his or her
spouse, that someone (e.g. sex worker or garden boy) is likely having
sex with another person. The another person is likely having sex
with an additional person. And so on. As I said, a network. Kind
of like a spider web. The ever-expanding nature suggests that sexual
networks represent a lot of people in bed together. Not literally
in bed all at the same time; rather in bed together in that with
each sexual relationship, who else each participant is having sex
with can have an impact on sexual health. This is the ripple effect
of a sexual network. In Zimbabwe and many places in the world, often
there are hesitancies to acknowledge the existence and extent of
sexual networks. However, data can be revealing. A recent
survey by PSI
indicates that in Zimbabwe, 33% of men and 29% of women have more
than one regular sexual partner. This means that roughly one-third
of the men and one-third of the women in the country are potentially
nodes in sexual networks.
Summary
of the presentations
Catherine
Makoni-s short story entitled Letters to my Cousin
poignantly brought home the notion that possessing the lived experiences
and factual knowledge to advise a relative how to lead a sexually
safe life does not always translate into the relative embracing
the advice. Additionally, being an advisor likely involves a reflective
journey concerning one-s own experiences as well as broader
societal views surrounding sex and relationships. The story is a
series of letters written by a 30-something professional woman to
her university student cousin (Jane). In expressing concern that
Jane is dating a man ten years her senior, the older cousin attempts
to help Jane realize the lies she is being told. He-s married
and not telling you. He-s cognizant that being older gives
him financial and emotional power over you, making it difficult
for you, for example, to insist he use a condom. As the letters
unfold, the older cousin gives Jane an example of a friend (Barbara)
who was in the same situation, again trying to expose Jane-s
boyfriend as not forthcoming with the truth.
And like
your boyfriend, he did not want his children to meet his girlfriend
until he was sure the relationship was going somewhere. In case
you didn-t get the meaning here, let me be blunt. The only
place that man wanted that relationship to go was to Barbara-s
flat, and specifically Barbara-s bed. It is such a classic
lie that some men in this country are so fond of.
During the discussion
period, Catherine acknowledged that some motivation to write the
story stemmed from feeling there-s a disconnection between
generations. Younger women feel their experiences, particularly
in relationships with men, are unique to them. But, they are not
unique. The story draws out this disconnect and as the story comes
to a close, the older cousin emphasizes her advice is not merely
relationship advice. Instead, it might be a matter of life and death.
Do you
what the tragedy would be Jane? Your contracting the HIV virus
at the age of 21. But do you know what the greater tragedy would
be? It would be not learning anything from the lives of our mothers.
Your mother was the nicest person you could find. Do you remember
the testimonies during her funeral? That she was humble. She was
gentle. She was kind. She was meek. Do you remember people saying
what a good and faithful wife she was? How even when she was in
pain, she would struggle to her knees to pray. She died Jane.
She followed her husband, your father, to his grave. And that
could easily be your fate too, if you do not learn from her life.
Perhaps they did not know better, but we certainly do. Perhaps
she didn-t have a choice, but you do.
Further, the
older cousin makes no apologies as she sees this as a situation
where sugarcoating the issues will not help. The older cousin is
concerned Jane is heading toward a toxic relationship. She uses
her letters to convey to Jane what she feels mothers and daughters,
historically, have been conditioned to not discuss.
Our people
believe that a mother should never tell her daughter to leave
an abusive husband. That is tantamount to breaking that daughter-s
relationship. An unforgivable sin. But. How many mothers, after
their daughters have died at the hands of abusive husbands, have
wished that they-d whisked their daughters to safety. Society
be damned. How many mothers have stood over the graves of their
daughters, mourning the premature death of a daughter who took
her own life because living with an abusive spouse was just too
painful. How many mothers do you think have stood over their daughter-s
graves and wished they-d grabbed their daughter by the hand
and run for dear life.
With a similar
focus on the unspoken, Patience Mandishona, in outlining results
of a research
project assessing HIV/AIDS interventions at GALZ,
astutely suggested that we all live in (sex) closets of one form
or another. As Patience noted, the closet is "an enclosed
space where you do not want to open up and share." The closet
is potentially doubly isolating for individuals involved in same-sex
relationships. First are hesitancies and complexities around speaking
about any type of sex which can put one in a closet. And second,
the associated risks of intolerance and discrimination for a man
or woman to speak openly about a sexual relationship with someone
of the same sex.
Importantly,
through this research project, GALZ is continuing programmes for
its members while also working to encourage the larger NGO sector
to consider and integrate the needs of same-sex practicing people,
particularly with HIV/AIDS-related work. A type of integration garnering
increased attention in the region.
As noted in
the discussion period, much of the increased attention stems from
growing understanding of the broader perspective, that Lesbian,
Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) rights are actually human
rights. Thus in the context of provision of HIV and AIDS services,
LGBT communities must be brought into the fold of programmatic design
and implementation. In Zimbabwe, evidence of this shift toward greater
awareness, acceptance, and inclusion is emerging in the work of
ASOs, notably SAfAIDS
and also in the National
AIDS Council (NAC) 2006-2010 strategic
plan.
The document
specifically mentions men who have sex with men (MSM), defined as
men who do not identify as gay or bisexual, but have sex with other
men and in some cases, while also having sexual relationships with
women.
At the other
end of the open up and share spectrum, PSI-s Wellington Mushayi
drew on data where people spoke in detail about concurrent sexual
partnerships. In the context of continuing to promote partner reduction,
the research also took realistic recognition that overlapping sexual
relationships exist in Zimbabwe. The presentation was entitled:
Small House, Hure, Sugar Daddies, and Garden Boys: A Qualitative
Study of Heterosexual Concurrent Sexual Partnerships among Men and
Women in Zimbabwe. The first aspect of the project created a space
for roughly 150 participants aged 18 to 40 to outline and define
the scenarios around which they are having concurrent sexual relationships.
The presentation highlighted sexual activity that was most commonly
occurring in addition to with a spouse. For men it was wife plus
sex worker, small house, divorced/single woman, young girl. For
women it was husband plus garden boy, boyfriend, sugar daddy, driver,
businessman, foreigner.
With these combinations
identified, the presentation went on to outline some of the reasons
why individuals pursue sexual relationships outside of marriage.
The focus group discussions revealed that men and women feel social
and economic pressures to have multiple sexual partners. I imagine
these pressures to be real; at the same time, the respondents spoke
honestly and indicated that one cut to the chase reason for sex
outside marriage revolves around seeking sexual pleasure. It is
a case of subscribing to the belief that someone other than a spouse
is more skilled and adventurous in bed. Unsettling was the revelation
among the respondents that most use condoms inconsistently and hold
the perception that concurrent sexual partnering represents a low
risk for sexually-transmitted infections, including HIV. Whatever
the reasons, the research makes clear that people tend to believe
the benefits outweigh the risks, as Wellington noted in conclusion:
"For some women and young men, concurrent sexual partnerships
meet social and economic needs that may prove more compelling than
health needs."
The panel of
speakers included a mix of artists and social scientists. The aim
here was to highlight the different, yet equally probing, insightful,
and valuable ways of engaging social issues and producing knowledge.
As well as drawing out the ways complex topics such as sex and its
interconnections to economic, political, and socio-cultural circumstances
benefit from an approach involving the use of qualitative or experience-based
data. For example, both fictionalized accounts and social scientific
research have the ability to tease out reflections individuals make.
Often tapping into thought processes and the ways people navigate
what they experience, the choices they make, and in turn, potentially
adjust to the world around them. Ethel
Kabwato opened and closed the programme with several poems which
provided insight into the intricacies of day to day to life and
the ways people navigate choices between vocalizing injustices and
suffering in silence. Her poem entitled Remember me tells the layered
story of a woman remembering her past. The narrator speaks, in the
present, to a childhood friend revealing fond memories as well as
what has been her sanctuary for private tears. The words are a poignant
rendering of someone drawing connections and piecing together an
untold story. Each line unravels layers, and as the poem concludes,
revealed is what wants to be told.
I still
listen to Mutukudzi with much passion
But only during the day
With Mama-s Jackie O-s sunglasses shielding the heat
Night time is when they come for me
As he used to do
Creeping in my blankets
My muffled cries are the childish cry of a seven year old
Remember me Terry?
Ethel-s
poem along with each of the presentations, effectively add to growing
awareness that understandings and solutions when it comes to circumstances
associated with sexual relationships do not rest solely in statistics
and hard science. Channeling intellectual energies toward examining
what people experience and how people negotiate the complex worlds
around them represents an effective path to embrace the process
of how new ideas form and how change takes hold.
Summary
of the group discussions
Charity Maruta,
Director of International
Video Fair (IVF) served as moderator for the discussion. Given
her background as Executive Producer of the film Sex
in the City (Harare) in a Time of AIDS, Charity is skilled in
fostering an open and honest environment for discussion. As a project,
Sex in the City brought together 14 Zimbabweans for six days of
discussions concerning sex. In blending documentary film making
techniques with social science research methods, the project captured,
on film, insights concerning, for example, the ways (male and female)
condoms can be an exciting part of foreplay, personal stories concerning
experiences with violence and/or sexual abuse, and the ways certain
sexual positions are more pleasurable for men while other sexual
positions are more pleasurable for women. The film demonstrates
that one of the first steps to break the sex is taboo belief is
to create spaces for discussions. During the week of filming, once
provided space, the group relished in the opportunity to share,
open up, and expand their sexual minds through conversations, laughs,
and a few tears. The film will be released soon and I have no doubt
it will effectively enhance understanding that we potentially put
our emotional, physical, spiritual, and intellectual selves at risk
by being silent when it comes to sex.
Equally, on
this November day at Alliance Française a group of roughly
30 people relished in the opportunity to speak about sex. The discussion
lasted an hour. It was lively and wide-ranging. In my view, the
panelists and the audience walked away with greater appreciation
on two interrelated fronts. Firstly, sex is both an emotional topic
as well as a topic where the temptation to stereotype looms large.
Secondly, much of the discussion made apparent how difficult it
is conduct research on sex. Not so much difficult because of the
over-used mantra that in Africa sex is taboo and therefore, research
is not possible. I don-t believe that and this event is evidence
to the contrary. Rather, difficult because for each decision concerning
research design, there is usually a solid argument in support of
a different decision.
Word
choice, emotions, and letting data speak
The issue of
emotion entered the discussions early as several people raised questions
about the use of hure in the title of the presentation
by Wellington Mushayi from PSI. Hure is a Shona word meaning
whore. In some instances, hure denotes either a man or
a woman who sleeps around, but most often references a prostitute.
The concern was that the word is derogatory and offensive, particularly
to women. Some of the female focus group participants indicated
they have sex with younger men; commonly, referred to as garden
boys and the relationships, in some cases, involve providing cash.
From an historical perspective, garden boy is offensive given its
place within colonial discourses and its power to cast colonial
subjects as uncivilized. However, garden boy is an English term,
just doesn-t carry the same sting of a Shona word and in the
present day, I suspect it-s becoming harder to interpret garden
boy as derogatory or offensive. In fact, the opposite interpretation
might be emerging. Garden boy elicits visions of a hunky, buff young
man there to provide a woman pleasure and in turn, develop a stud
reputation among male peers. You can almost imagine a garden boy
beaming and saying: How cool is this, I-m having sex with
these hot women, I don-t have to marry them, and they give
me money. The hure versus garden boy terminology makes
apparent an all too common linguistic sex/gender bias.
Wellington was
appreciative of the comments and acknowledged that there are negative
consequences to using hure, yet made the important point
that it-s one thing to quibble over a title. But, there is
not the same space to quibble over data. In focus group discussions,
importantly conducted in Shona, men were asked whom they have sex
with. One of their responses was hure. Therefore, to use
hure in a summary of findings represents an accurate reflection
of what research participants reported. In fact, I see use of hure
as a useful finding in and of itself. Wellington indicated that
hure cropped up, not just once, but often. This means that
a significant number of men in the focus groups had no problem using
the word hure. Further, their comfortableness potentially
reveals something about how they view sex and women. As a researcher,
why sugarcoat? That is the aim of engaging people in qualitative
research, to probe and to get them to speak honestly. Sometimes
complete honesty can be hard for the researcher to stomach, but
it can make for richer data. It-s a bit like ZANU-PF and power
sharing. Yes they-ve signed on, but what do they really think
about power sharing. The real truth needs to be exposed (not sugarcoated)
as a step in the path to fight for change. Unfortunately, PSI's
research project, to a degree, exposes that it-s not uncommon
for Zimbabwean men to think of women who provide sex in exchange
for cash, not as sex workers who have made a choice, but as disposable
whores with no rights who are being paid to service them. To change
that perception, one needs to know fully and be honest about the
extent that it exists.
Getting beyond stereotypes
Throughout discussions,
the research process was a prominent theme. It seemed, to a degree,
discussions went in these directions because it-s easy to
pick through how a project was undertaken. And harder to let your
guard down and think through, relate at a personal level, and share
yourself in terms of what a project is revealing. In fact, one person
noted that the group had not discussed Ethel-s poem. Noting
that the poem touched on abuse; therefore, perhaps it would be beneficial
to speak about the links between sex and violence. The suggestion
was met with silence. Ironically, silence was also a theme within
the poem.
Despite research
process discussion having been diversionary, it served as a useful
lens through which to examine the meanings and implications of the
research results. Both GALZ and PSI undertook qualitative research
where conversations with people represent the data. As noted during
the presentations and group discussions, one risk with this form
of data is the tendencies for respondents to give politically correct
answers. Respondents, on most occasions, understand a project-s
focus, aims, etc. and therefore, might be inclined to provide answers
they think researchers want to hear. With topics such as sex and
HIV/AIDS, this can be a particularly prominent dynamic. A researcher
never knows with certainty if respondents respond honestly. Yet
there are indications when respondents don-t give the whole
truth. For example, there-s often stereotyping attached to
views about sex/sexuality. Men like to have sex more than women
do. Sex is no good once married. Men cannot be monogamous. I had
sex with the older man because he paid my school fees. And so on.
Like any stereotype, there are grains of truth, yet inherently stereotypes
are likely not telling us anything particularly new. When data reveals
an abundance of stereotypical comments, it-s worth considering
not only, that respondents may have shied away from revealing the
full story, but also that perhaps the questions asked did not probe
deep enough.
One member of
the audience expressed concern that PSI's data on concurrent sexual
partnerships might be falling into the trap of predictable results
and in turn, perpetuating stereotypes. I certainly do not want to
discredit the important project PSI undertook. There is no doubt
in my mind they collected valuable data which will benefit their
programming as well as the broader NGO sector. But, the thing is
this. PSI made choices with respect to project design and what to
highlight in a presentation, as any organization or individual researcher
would do. In this case, a major thrust was to identify, categorize/define,
and name who the concurrent sex partners are. You see this in the
title and the presentation as well. Thus, it does become worth asking:
Is it a major finding that people have sex with spouses, hure,
small house, garden boy, boyfriend, girlfriend, sugar daddy, driver,
foreigner? Is it a major finding that people have multiple sexual
partners to seek satisfaction? To lessen social and economic pressure?
Some might consider
it a major finding that multiple sexual relationships are roughly
the same among Zimbabwean men and women. To me, it is not the statistic
which is significant (29% of women report multiple sexual partners.)
Instead, significant are tendencies to be shocked to the gills by
this finding. I find the shock suspicious. Men and women are sexual
beings. In more countries than not, and if people give honest answers,
it-s not inconceivable that multiple sexual partnering would
run at roughly the same level for men and women. Accurate data on
this is, however, hard to come by. For example, I accessed data
from Demographic Health Surveys (DHS) in 24 sub-Saharan African
countries. The
data shows that the average percent across those 24 countries
of multiple sexual partnering in the previous year to be 22% for
men and 3% for women. In Zimbabwe, the 2005 DHS data indicates 14%
of men and 1% of women had multiple sexual partners during the previous
year. This means one of two things: 1) PSI's 2006 survey is showing
a jump from 14 to 33% among men and a jump from 1 to 29% among women,
in just one year or 2) People lie when asked to participate in demographic
health surveys.
Worse than acting
shocked is refusing to believe that some women do actually have
multiple sexual partners. Whether stemming from elements within
women-s rights movements wanting to place blame on men as
the only ones who have sex with more than one person. Or those who
think in double standards, that it-s perfectly fine (or a
god given right) for men to have multiple sexual partners, but it-s
morally wrong for women to do so. Too much shock and refusal blend
into a dangerous perpetuation of the false stereotype that all Zimbabwean
women are inherently sexually passive.
Again, I don-t
mean to diminish PSI-s work, but I would advocate and what
came out of the group discussion was the need to delve into the
data deeper. Studies such as this one need to be more than a definitional
listing of who people have sex with. The analyses need to unpack,
in detail and through experiential data, the social and economic
dynamics creating pressure, and how these pressures potentially
shape choices around sexual relationships. In addition, as Wellington
indicated is the case, to use the data as a baseline for further
and more targeted qualitative studies. My suggestions would be studies
that avoid predicable and simplistic sampling and analysis according
to marital status. Presenting data on marital infidelities is not
the same thing as presenting data on concurrent sexual partnering.
On the issue
of PSI-s focus on married versus single individuals, the discussion
brought forth two important points. Firstly, focus on married couples
and only naming their additional sex partners has limits, and I
would respectfully submit it-s a conservative and shortsighted
way to look at things. In paraphrasing the comments of one person
in the audience, the claim is focus on married people, but at the
end of the day, the sample, by connection, is full of single people.
The comment is highlighting that obviously, the married couples
in the sample are not single, but the marital status of hure,
small house, garden boy, boyfriend, girlfriend, sugar daddy, driver,
and foreigner is unknown. Likely they are single. Single and part
of the concurrency pattern under examination. And remember the definition
of concurrency implies that one is examining a network of people
connected through sexual activity. Some in the network are married
and some are not. Therefore, a study on concurrency ought not to
claim focus on either married or single people. Focus is on the
network.
To look only
at married couples is similar to the ill-conceived logic often used
in the study of sex work. The sex worker garners all the attention,
while the clients of the sex worker, the people who make sex work
a viable profession, generally don-t appear within the mix
of the research. In PSI's research, the married individuals are
parallel to the sex worker. That-s where attention is directed
(toward the married individuals) with little consideration of the
views, motivations, etc. as expressed by who the married individuals,
in addition to the spouse, are having sex with. My point is that
examining concurrency and examining marital infidelity are not the
same thing. Therefore, sampling and analysis along the lines of
marital status has limited use and detracts from a fuller understanding
of the extent of the sexual network. In my view, the dream focus
group for a study of concurrency would consist of following. Non-monogamous
married male, non-monogamous married female, female sex worker (or
small house), garden boy (or sugar daddy), sexually active single
male, and sexually active single female. All in one room for a discussion.
In my mind, this group of people would provide interesting comments
concerning concurrency and the ensuing sexual networks. More so
than a husband or wife who speaks about their extra sex partner(s)
in an abstract way. Abstract in the sense that the sex worker or
garden boy is not part of the conversation (the data), yet a node
in the sexual network.
Secondly and
more broadly related, discussion around PSI-s focus on married
versus single brought forth that it is challenging to conduct research
on sexual relationships. In the case of PSI-s research and
as described above, one major challenge concerns sampling. Or the
crucial need for a group of people who can bring the conversations
(the data) beyond stereotypes. As one person in the audience suggested,
the aim is to delve into the nuances; specifically, the links sexual
activity have to the pursuit of influence, control, and power. How
those dynamics come to the surface and play out. The subtleties
of what drives certain situations to be sexually charged. The ways
that people navigate and experience the sexual choices they make.
To get beyond the standard and sometimes sugarcoated findings. What-s
commonly known is this. Often married (or partnered) individuals
are not monogamous. Often men and women pursue sexual relationships
to lessen economic pressures. Often individuals have multiple sex
partners with knowledge of potential social and health risks.
I believe there
are tendencies to present these known dynamics (as described above)
over and over again as "new findings" because it-s
safer and less
controversial.
In turn then,
predictable advocacy emerges that is pro-monogamy, anti-transactional
sex, and insistent on more training on sexual health. That all can
work well and good. To a degree. But it isn-t probing enough;
therein lays the challenges in conducting research on sex. To get
beyond firmly fixed views about sex and relationships. To not just
speak openly about sex, but also to have a truly open mind about
what sex entails. To examine, without judgment, the diversity of
sexual desires, pairings, practices, and acts that exist. Not doing
so will likely yield a sample of people who repeat what is already
known.
In the case
of GALZ-s research, the potential challenges are different,
but also, precisely the same. The starting place for GALZ certainly
involves focus on same-sex attraction. Because GALZ is a membership
organization, this yields a defined sample that, to a degree, provides
a representative view of the LGBT community in Zimbabwe. There are
limits to the representativeness given the diversity among GALZ
members, and given that there are plenty of gays, lesbians, and
bisexuals in Zimbabwe who are not members of GALZ. Despite the slightly
neater sampling possibility, there are different (and layered) challenges
for GALZ. The first layer being that you are asking people to speak
about something they feel (same sex attraction) which has limited
degrees of acceptance in the country. On top of that, it-s
common for men and women attracted to the same sex to engage in
a self-reflective journey as part of the process to stand up and
proudly say: I-m gay. What this means is that any sample of
participants likely consists of people at different points in the
journey of self sexual acceptance. Where one is at in that journey
potentially is a factor differently shaping their comments. These
dynamics create a unique context as heterosexuality is accepted
in the country and heterosexuals generally don-t go through
a parallel process to stand up and proudly say: I-m straight.
Further, in
her presentation Patience indicated that politically correct answers
possibly stem from pressure to embrace categories or labels such
as lesbian, gay, or bisexual. There are certainly important rights-based
and other reasons to find solidarity in sexual identities. The concern
is when this happens at the expense of expressing the experiences
of same-sex attraction in one-s own terms. That said. And
I would add that over-reliance on representative views and sexual
identities can lead to stereotypes. I mean, what-s an LGBT
community anyway? The research challenges are precisely the
same. GALZ-s research is no different from that of PSI or
any research on sexual relationships. We-re talking about
qualitative research concerning who people have sex with, why they
do so, what the experiences are like, and the potential ways people
feel sexually vulnerable. The aim of getting beyond stereotypes,
and into the nuances. Whether gay or straight, sexual relationships
take their cues from a mix of contextual biological, cultural, economic,
political, and social factors. One of the overarching dynamics which
brings pressures, emotions, risks, and makes sex a complexly multi-faceted
topic is the pursuit of, yes, love and satisfaction, but also, the
pursuit of power. Unraveling the ways power plays out and strategizing
how to shift power imbalances represent central goals for any project
which examines some combination of sex, sexuality, sexual orientation,
sexual identities, sexual subjectivities, and sexual vulnerabilities.
Conclusion
On 28 November
2008, roughly 30 people participated in a discussion forum which
was advertised as an exploration of the topic of sexual vulnerabilities.
At times, the presentations and discussions came to be more about
the challenges associated with conducting research concerning sexual
relationships. Yet, present was a group of people not afraid to
ask the difficult questions and eager to build their own and a broader
societal knowledge base concerning the layered sets of meanings
and complications surrounding the topic of sex and its various interconnected
issues.
One final note.
Thank you to the panelists and the audience. For the insights provided
during this event as well as the insights and support during the
course of my two years in Harare. Thank you to Kubatana for publishing
this summary. While I believe this account an accurate reflection
of the presentations and discussions, keep in mind that I have the
benefit of hindsight. I have had the opportunity to reflect on what
transpired. In turn, and as any writer does to a degree, I am putting
this summary within the context of my own views. If I misrepresented
the comments of anyone in attendance, I apologize. In the end, my
hope is that this summary as well as the ways in which I have integrated
additional perspectives will serve as a tool for planning similar
events, future research projects, and continued dialogue.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
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