Saturday, November 15, 2014

From U Colorado: Bundles of Norms About Teen Sex and Pregnancy

 2014 Nov 11. pii: 1049732314557086. [Epub ahead of print]

Bundles of Norms About Teen Sex and Pregnancy.

Author information

  • 1University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado, USA mollborn@colorado.edu.
  • 2Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA.

Abstract

Teen pregnancy is a cultural battleground in struggles over morality, education, and family. At its heart are norms about teen sex, contraception, pregnancy, and abortion. Analyzing 57 interviews with college students, we found that "bundles" of related norms shaped the messages teens hear. Teens did not think their communities encouraged teen sex or pregnancy, but normative messages differed greatly, with either moral or practical rationalizations. Teens readily identified multiple norms intended to regulate teen sex, contraception, abortion, childbearing, and the sanctioning of teen parents. Beyond influencing teens' behavior, norms shaped teenagers' public portrayals and post hoc justifications of their behavior. Although norm bundles are complex to measure, participants could summarize them succinctly. These bundles and their conflicting behavioral prescriptions create space for human agency in negotiating normative pressures. The norm bundles concept has implications for teen pregnancy prevention policies and can help revitalize social norms for understanding health behaviors.

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