Where does risk lie in sexual practices? A study of young people’s social representations
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Date
2020-07-13Author
Gil de Montes Echaide, María Lorena
Asla Alcibar, Nagore
Larrañaga Eguilegor, Maider
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Health, Risk & Society 22(3-4) : 249-265 (2020)
Abstract
In this study we investigate the social representations of risky sexual practices.
Specifically, we analyse the circumstances in which young Spanish people consider
a sexual practice as risky, and how such ‘representations’ of risk have implications for
decisions about using condoms. We use the Grid Elaboration Method to gather the
naturalistic thoughts and feelings of 175 young people regarding risky sexual practices
and performed a lexical analysis of the content of the responses using Iramuteq software.
Our analyses suggested two main textual universes regarding risky sexual practices. The
first of these, at a theoretical-informative level, is clearly linked to the discourse of
experts, where condom use is a key factor and risk is distanced from the self. The second,
at a practical-applied level, represents risky sexual practices in a context that is linked to
the unknown and a lack of control due to the use of substances or the spontaneity of the
sexual encounter. We conclude that understandings of risk emerge from various sources
of information, values, or social conventions that articulate everyday understandings and
are likely to guide sexual practices, some of which are far removed from expert risk
knowledge. We therefore understand representations of risk in sexual relations as situated
within a social context. We conclude by discussing the substantive, theoretical, and
practical consequences of this social construction of risk.