Society & Culture - Posted by Syl Kacapyr-Cornell on Tuesday, August 14, 2012 10:46 - 0 Comments    
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Teen happiness may hinge on gender norms

"Perhaps some adolescents are harassed not so much because they are gay," says Ritch Savin-Williams, "but because they violate 'acceptable' ways of acting. If so, sexism may be a more pervasive problem among youth than homophobia." (Credit: Charles Hutchins/Flickr)

CORNELL (US) — Regardless of sexual orientation, teens whose gender expression varies from the norm are not as happy as their gender-conforming peers.


The findings suggest it may be the effects of not conforming to gender stereotypes, rather than sexual orientation, that drive increased mental health risks found among non-heterosexual youth. Although being a feminine boy or a masculine girl is often related to sexual orientation, until now, the separate effects of gender expression and sexuality on mental health had not been untangled.

“We need to rethink how sexual orientation relates to health. Too much emphasis has been put on a non-heterosexual orientation itself being detrimental,” says Gerulf Rieger, lead author of a study published in the Archives of Sexual Behavior and a postdoctoral associate, who conducted the study with Ritch C. Savin-Williams, professor of human development and director of the Sex and Gender Lab at Cornell University’s College of Human Ecology.

Straight from the Source

Read the original study

DOI: 10.1007/s10508-011-9738-0

For their research, Rieger and Savin-Williams analyzed data from 475 rural high school students who participated in a survey about their sexual orientation, preference for male-typical or female-typical activities, and psychological well-being.

Non-heterosexual youth in the study were more likely to violate gender norms for behavior, feelings, activities, and interests, but so did some heterosexual youth. The effect of being a feminine boy or a masculine girl was similar regardless of sexual orientation—both childhood and adolescent gender nonconformity were negatively linked to well-being.

The effects on mental health, however, were small, which the researchers say may explain why most same-sex oriented individuals experience few mental health problems.

“Perhaps some adolescents are harassed not so much because they are gay,” says Savin-Williams, “but because they violate ‘acceptable’ ways of acting. If so, sexism may be a more pervasive problem among youth than homophobia.”

The research was supported by the Cornell University Agricultural Experiment Station federal formula funds, received from the National Institutes for Food and Agriculture, US Department of Agriculture.

Source: Cornell University

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