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The
slang of sexual networks
IRIN News
July 09, 2009
http://www.plusnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=85198
Risky sexual
behaviour has a language of its own on the University
of Zimbabwe's (UZ) campus in the capital, Harare.
When female students
arrive, they join an informal sorority known as the "university
spinster association", or USA, while their male counterparts
are inducted into the "university bachelor association",
or UBA.
Their sexual networks
are coded in a slew of slang that, according to University of Pretoria
researcher Tsitsi Masvawure, masks high-risk behaviours, including
multiple concurrent partnerships and cross-generational sex, which
facilitate the spread of sexually transmitted infections and HIV.
Masvawure presented the
findings of her study, conducted over 15 months at UZ, where she
also studied, at the Sexual Violence Research Initiative Forum in
Johannesburg, South Africa.
Induction into these
risk behaviours comes soon after orientation week, when the "gold
rush" begins and first-year female students, perceived to be
"sexually pure", are targeted by older male students for
a one-night stand, or "one-day international".
These young women are
categorized as "gold", those in their second year as "silver",
and third-year female students are labelled "bronze" members
of the USA.
Older female students
often engage in multiple concurrent relationships, not to survive
in cash-strapped Zimbabwe, but to secure access to luxury goods
like expensive hair extensions or high-priced foodstuffs, or because
they perceive older men to be better boyfriends, Masvawure told
IRIN/PlusNews.
"UBAs are not romantic,"
one young woman told Masvawure in an interview. "I don't want
you to rush ... [in making] me yours; don't rush, this is not a
land reform programme."
Younger male
students also helped connect female friends with wealthier, older
men, often finding potential sugar daddies at transport hubs en
route to the university in Harare's city centre - an exercise known
as "pimping".
"This disputes the
traditional analysis that transactional sex is about money and sex,
with boys giving money and girls giving sex. These girls were not
from the poorest households, they were from families that, in some
cases, were politically connected," Masvawure noted.
She said her study revealed
problems in HIV prevention programmes on campuses, and hoped it
would lead to more targeted HIV interventions for students.
The government is looking
to strengthen sex education to better equip young people before
they reach tertiary level. A policy on adolescent sexual and reproductive
health is expected to be released in two weeks.
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