Despite the HIV/AIDS pandemic and over two decades of safe-sex communication and condom social marketing in Nigeria, unmarried people continue to engage in unprotected sex. Understanding their perspectives of unprotected sex will be imperative for sustainable policy and intervention design. To realize this objective, the author synthesized Giddens's structuration theory and Rob Stones's structurationist project research brackets to develop a long interview guide used to elicit unmarried university students' perspectives of influences on unprotected sex, and the feasibility of sustainable behavior change in Nigeria. Participants' constructed unprotected sex as prescripted, and the cumulative outcome of complex institutional (structural), interpersonal, and agential influences. Their narratives challenge the popular but narrow loss of control, sensation-seeking, and ignorance theses of unprotected sex. Instead, participants' narratives implicate an interrelated web of persuasive and insidious institutional and agential influences, in a manner that privilege neither structure nor agency. To promote safer sexual practices therefore, stakeholders must concurrently engage with institutional and agential influences on unprotected sex-and not focus on unmarried people's sexual agencies alone, as current interventions do in Nigeria. © The Author(s) 2012.
CITATION STYLE
Okonkwo, A. D. (2013). Generational perspectives of unprotected sex and sustainable behavior change in Nigeria. SAGE Open, 3(1), 1–18. https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244012472346
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