Publication | Closed Access
Sexual Identity and Its Contribution to MSM Risk Behavior in Bangaluru (Bangalore), India: The Results of a Two-Stage Cluster Sampling Survey
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Citations
24
References
2008
Year
EngineeringMsm Risk BehaviorHomosexualityQueer TheorySocial SciencesSexual CommunicationSexual CulturesGender IdentityGender StudiesDifferent Hiv-risk BehaviorsPublic HealthSurvey MethodologyStatisticsSexual And Reproductive HealthCommercial SexSexual Well-beingSexual ResponsibilityAlternative SexualitySexual BehaviorEpidemiologySexual HealthSociologyReceptive SexSexual IdentitySexual OrientationHuman SexualityMsm Identities
In India, there are categories of MSM (hijras, kothis, double-deckers, panthis and bisexuals), which are generally associated with different HIV-risk behaviors. Our objective was to quantify differences across MSM identities (n = 357) and assess the extent they conform to typecasts that prevail in policy-orientated discourse. More feminine kothis (26%) and hijras (13%) mostly reported receptive sex, and masculine panthis (15%) and bisexuals (23%) insertive anal sex. However, behavior did not always conform to expectation, with 25% and 16% of the sample reporting both insertive and receptive anal intercourse with known and unknown noncommercial partners, respectively (p < 0.000). Although behavior often complied with stereotyped role and identity, male-with-male sexual practices were fluid. Reification of these categories in an intervention context may hinder our understanding of the differential HIV risk among MSM.
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