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Articles

‘All in all it is just a judgement call’: issues surrounding sexual consent in young people’s heterosexual encounters

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Pages 35-50 | Received 28 Jan 2017, Accepted 13 Jun 2017, Published online: 04 Jul 2017
 

ABSTRACT

In the UK, there has been growing concern about young people’s understanding of sexual consent, with the views of young people themselves often lost in academic and educational policy debates. However, the focus on high rates of sexual violence has meant a lack of attention on the everyday negotiation of consensual heterosexual activity, leading to assumptions being made regarding young people’s lack of understanding of sexual consent. This paper emerges from a wider study of over 500 young people which sought to uncover their understanding of the issues. Drawing on data from workshops and the open text responses to an on-line survey the findings presented in this paper show that the majority of heterosexual young people understood the complexity of sexual consent as an embodied process, which can be difficult to define, talk about or practice uniformly. This complex understanding, in which sexual consent is a continuum rather than a dichotomy, has implications for sexual education initiatives. We argue that it is only by providing a closer understanding of how – within consensual sexual activities – young people understand and enact sexual consent through a range of embodied communication strategies that education surrounding sexual assault will become meaningful.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank all of the young people who provided their views and gave their time to this research. Thank you also to the funder, Coventry University Pump Prime project fund.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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