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Revision as of 06:29, 5 February 2010 by 125.168.40.195 (talk) (→Homosexuality)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) This article is about human sexual perceptions. For information about sexual activities and practices, see Human sexual behavior.Human sexuality is how people experience the erotic and express themselves as sexual beings. Frequently driven by the desire for sexual pleasure, human sexuality has biological, physical and emotional aspects. Biologically, it refers to the reproductive mechanism as well as the basic biological drive that exists in all species and can encompass sexual intercourse and sexual contact in all its forms. Emotional aspects deal with the intense emotions relating to sexual acts and associated social bonds. Physical issues around sexuality range from purely medical considerations to concerns about the physiological or even psychological and sociological aspects of sexual behaviour.
The term can also cover cultural, political, legal and philosophical aspects. It may also refer to issues of morality, ethics, theology, spirituality or religion and how they relate to all things sexual. Recent studies on human sexuality have highlighted that sexual aspects are of major importance in building up personal identity and in the social evolution of individuals:
Human sexuality is not simply imposed by instinct or stereotypical conducts, as it happens in animals, but it is influenced both by superior mental activity and by social, cultural, educational and normative characteristics of those places where the subjects grow up and their personality develops. Consequently, the analysis of sexual sphere must be based on the convergence of several lines of development such as affectivity, emotions and relations.
Deleuze and Guattari, in their 1972 classic Anti-Oedipus, discussed how sexuality is a powerful force that invests all the social activities:
Familialism maintains that sexuality operates only in the family the truth is that sexuality is everywhere: the way a bureaucrat fondles his records, a judge administers justice, a business causes money to circulate; the way the burgeoise fucks the proletariat; and so on. And there is no need to resort to metaphors, any more than for the libido to go by way of metemorphoses. Hitler gave the fascists a hard-on. Flags, nations, armies, banks give a lot of people hard-ons.
Art and artifacts from past eras help to portray human sexuality of the time.
Biology and physiology
See also: Sexual intercourse § Health benefitsThe biological aspects of human sexuality deal with human reproduction and the physical means with which to carry it out. They also deal with the influence of biological factors on other aspects of sexuality, such as organic and neurological responses, heredity, hormonal issues, gender issues and sexual dysfunction.
Benefits
Apart from the possibility of its resulting in successful pregnancy and childbirth, sex has a wide range of health benefits including relief from stress, more immunity through increased immunoglobulin A, reduced risk of heart attack and of prostate cancer, sounder sleep and loss in body weight.
Risks
Human intercourse can however also result in sexually transmitted diseases such as those arising from HIV/AIDS, chlamydia, syphilis, gonorrhea, and HPV. For this reason, some people require potential sex partners to be tested for sexually transmitted diseases before engaging in sex.
Intercourse can also lead to unwanted pregnancy. This can be avoided by the use of birth control measures such as condoms, spermicides, hormonal contraception, and sterilization.
Sociocultural aspects
Human sexuality can also be understood as part of the social life of humans, governed by implied rules of behavior and the status quo. This focus narrows the view to groups within a society. The sociocultural aspect examines influences on and from social norms, including the effects of politics and the mass media. Such movements can help to bring about massive changes in the social norm — examples include the sexual revolution and the rise of feminism.
The link between constructed sex meanings and racial ideologies has been studied. Sexual meanings are constructed to maintain racial-ethnic-national boundaries, by denigration of "others" and regulation of sexual behavior within the group. "Both adherence to and deviation from such approved behaviors, define and reinforce racial, ethnic, and nationalist regimes."
The age and manner in which children are informed of issues of sexuality is a matter of sex education. The school systems in almost all developed countries have some form of sex education but the nature of the issues covered varies widely. In some countries (such as Australia and much of Europe) "age-appropriate" sex education often begins in pre-school, whereas other countries leave sex education to the pre-teenage and teenage years. Sex education covers a range of topics, including the physical, mental, and social aspects of sexual behavior.
Psychological aspects
Sexuality in humans generates profound emotional and psychological responses. Some theorists identify sexuality as the central source of human personality.
Psychological studies of sexuality focus on psychological influences that affect sexual behavior and experiences. Early psychological analyses were carried out by Sigmund Freud, who believed in a psychoanalytic approach. He also conjectured the concepts of erogenous zones, psychosexual development, and the Oedipus complex, among others.
Behavior theorists such as John B. Watson and B. F. Skinner examine the actions and consequences and their ramifications. These theorists would, for example, study a child who is punished for sexual exploration and see if they grow up to associate negative feelings with sex in general. Social-learning theorists use similar concepts, but focus on cognitive activity and modeling.
Gender identity is a person's own sense of identification as female, male, both, neither, or somewhere in between. The social construction of gender has been discussed by a wide variety of scholars, Judith Butler notable among them. Recent contributions consider the influence of feminist theory and courtship research.
Fertility
Both women and men have hormonal cycles determining when a woman can achieve pregnancy and when a man is most virile. The female cycle is approximately 28 days long, but the male cycle is variable.
Menstrual cycle
Main article: Menstrual cycleAlthough women can become pregnant at any time during their menstrual cycle, peak fertility usually occurs two days before and two days after the ovulation date.
Female fertility
The average age of the first menstruation or menarche in the United States is about 12.5 years.
Women's fertility peaks around the age of 19-24, and can start to decline after 30. With a rise in women postponing pregnancy, this can create an infertility problem. Of women trying to get pregnant, without using fertility drugs or in vitro fertilization:
- At age 30, 75% will get pregnant within one year, and 91% within four years.
- At age 35, 66% will get pregnant within one year, and 84% within four years.
- At age 40, 44% will get pregnant within one year, and 64% within four years.
Male fertility and age
Erectile dysfunction increases with age, but fertility does not decline in men as sharply as it does in women. There have been examples of males being fertile at 94 years old. However, evidence suggests that increased male age is associated with a decline in semen volume, sperm motility, and sperm morphology. Sperm count declines with age, with men aged 50–80 years producing sperm at an average rate of 75% compared with men aged 20–50 years.
Sexual behavior
Human sexual behavior, driven by the desire for pleasure, encompasses the search for a partner or partners, interactions between individuals, physical, emotional intimacy, and sexual contact which may lead to foreplay, masturbation and ultimately orgasm.
Attraction
Sexual attraction is a response to another person, that depends on a combination of the person possessing the traits and also on the criteria of the person experiencing the attraction. Sexual attraction can be heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, pansexual etc and there are even individuals who are asexual and have no sexual attraction to others. Sexual attraction may depend on the physical quality, including both looks and movements, of a person but can also be influenced by voice or smell as well as by individual preferences resulting from a variety of genetic, psychological, and cultural factors.
Though attempts have been made to devise objective criteria, a person's sexual attractiveness is to a large extent a subjective measure dependent on another person's interest, perception and sexual orientation as well as on mutual attraction. Interpersonal attraction includes factors such as physical or psychological similarity, familiarity, similarity, complementarity, reciprocal liking, and reinforcement.
Women are believed to be more generally attracted to men who are slightly taller and who have a relatively narrow waist and broad shoulders. Men may be attracted by women who are slightly shorter, have a youthful appearance and exhibit features such as a symmetrical face, full breasts, full lips, and a low waist-hip ratio.
Creating a partnership
Main article: Human sexual behaviourSeveral stages are involved here. Depending on the individuals concerned and the society in which they live, they may extend over a considerable period or may be completed quite quickly. They can consist of one or more of the following:
- Flirting: the manner in which an individual gains the attention of another in order to encourage romance or sexual relations by means of body language, conversation, joking or brief physical contact.
- Seduction: the process of one person deliberately enticing another to engage in some sort of human sexual behavior. It can have both positive and negative connotations.
- Dating: the process of arranging meetings or outings with a potential partner with a view to investigating or enhancing their suitability for an intimate partnership.
- Courtship: the traditional dating period before engagement and marriage when couples get to know each other better.
- Physical intimacy: usually an expression of feelings such as close friendship or love, including holding hands, hugging, kissing, caressing, often leading to sexual activity.
- Foreplay: leading on from the above, foreplay can include deep tongue kissing, touching and massaging erogenous zones over clothing or rubbing them together, and undressing oneself or partner.
- Mutual masturbation: stimulation of the genitals of one or both partners, usually using the hands, without penetration and sometimes resulting in orgasm.
- Intercourse: the act, sometimes referred to as penetration, in which the male reproductive organ enters the female reproductive tract with a view to achieving orgasm.
Unconventional practices
Some people derive sexual pleasure from a variety of unconventional practices ranging from fetishism to BDSM.
- Fetishism can take many forms ranging from the desire for certain body parts, for example large breasts, rather than the actual partner. The object of desire is often clothing or rubber items. A fetish can however cause people significant psychosocial distress and can have detrimental effects on their lives, in which case treatment may be required.
- BDSM: a compound acronym covering bondage and discipline, dominance and submission, sadism and masochism. As a rule, one partner dominates the other during an agreed period of time. The parties involved usually experience pleasure although many of the practices performed, such as inflicting pain, humiliation or being restrained would be considered unpleasant under normal circumstances. Oral, anal or vaginal intercourse may occur.
Sex and religion
Main article: Religion and sexualityMost religions address the question of a "proper" role for sexuality in human interactions. Different religions have different codes of sexual morality, which regulate sexual activity or assign normative values to certain sexually charged actions or thoughts.
Some cultures discriminate against sexual contact outside of marriage although it is widely practiced. Extramarital sexual activity is strictly forbidden by Islamic and Jewish law.
Christianity
In Christianity, there are wide ranging views on what constitutes acceptable standards of sexual conduct from today's Christian denominations. Virtually all modern Christians agree that extramarital affairs are clearly forbidden by the Bible. However, there are increasingly differing views on the interpretation of Bible passages dealing with the acceptability of homosexuality, divorce and remarriage, and premarital sex, where in the past this was not the case as they were mostly unacceptable.
Islam
Main article: Islamic sexual jurisprudenceMost forms of sexual contact within a marriage are allowed. Sex is considered a pleasurable, even spiritual activity, and a duty. At least one hadith explicitly states that for a married couple to have sex is a good deed rewarded by God. Another hadith suggests that a man should not leave the proverbial bed until the woman is satisfied, a reference many say points to orgasm.
Adultery warrants severe punishment. Pre-marital sex is also considered sinful, albeit less severe. All shari'a laws regulating sexual conduct apply to both men and women equally, apart from those concerning menstruation. Same-sex intercourse officially carries the death penalty in several Muslim nations.
Judaism
In traditional Judaism, sex and reproduction are the holiest of acts, permitting one to imitate God, "The Creator". There are, however, many boundaries and guidelines. Within the boundaries, there are virtually no outright strictures. Judaism forbids sexual relations outside of heterosexual marriage, maintains biblical strictures on relations within marriage including observance of Niddah, a prohibition on relations for a period including the menstrual period, and Tzniut, requirements of modest dress and behavior. Traditional Judaism views adultery, incest, and male homosexuality as grave sins.
Sexual activity and orientations
Sexual pleasure
Sexual pleasure is pleasure derived from any kind of sexual activity. Though orgasm is generally known, sexual pleasure includes erotic pleasure during foreplay, and pleasure due to fetish or BDSM.
Heterosexuality
Main article: HeterosexualityHeterosexuality involves individuals of opposite sexes.
Different-sex sexual practices are limited by laws in many places. In some countries, mostly those where religion has a strong influence on social policy, marriage laws serve the purpose of encouraging people to have sex only within marriage. Sodomy laws were seen as discouraging same-sex sexual practices, but may affect opposite-sex sexual practices. Laws also ban adults from committing sexual abuse, committing sexual acts with anyone under an age of consent, performing sexual activities in public, and engaging in sexual activities for money (prostitution). Though these laws cover both same-sex and opposite-sex sexual activities, they may differ in regard to punishment, and may be more frequently (or exclusively) enforced on those who engage in same-sex sexual activities.
Different-sex sexual practices may be monogamous, serially monogamous, or polyamorous, and, depending on the definition of sexual practice, abstinent or autoerotic (including masturbation).
Different religious and political movements have tried to influence or control changes in sexual practices including courting and marriage, though in most countries changes occur at a slow rate.
homo sexuality is gay dont do it -.- 4 fuck sake don't that is something so wrong u dunt understand how wrong it is dumb asses never do it -.-
Autoerotic sexuality
Main article: AutoeroticismAutoeroticism, also known as autosexuality, is sexual activity that does not involve another person as a partner. It can involve masturbation, though several paraphilias require a partner. Many people use dildos, vibrators, anal beads, sybian machines, and other sex toys while alone.
Though many autoerotic practices are relatively physically safe, some can be dangerous. These include erotic asphyxiation and self-bondage. The potential for injury or even death that exists while engaging in the partnered versions of these fetishes (choking and bondage, respectively) becomes drastically increased due to the isolation and lack of assistance in the event of a problem.
Coercive and abusive sexuality
Main article: Sexual abuseSexual activity can also encompass sexual abuse — that is, coercive or abusive use of sexuality. Examples include: rape, lust murder, child sexual abuse, and zoosadism (animal abuse which may be sexual in nature), as well as (in many countries) certain non-consensual paraphilias such as frotteurism, telephone scatophilia (indecent phonecalls), and non-consensual exhibitionism and voyeurism (known as "indecent exposure" and "peeping tom" respectively).
The sexual abuse of individuals is widely prohibited by law and considered against the norms of society.
History of sexuality
Main article: History of human sexualityAncient civilizations
Many of the ancient civilisations provide evidence of developments in sexuality. In particular:
- Egypt: The couple Khnumhotep and Niankhkhnum, now buried in a joint Fifth-dynasty (2498-2345 BC) era tomb in Saqqara, Egypt, are the oldest recorded same-sex couple in human history. The Ancient Egyptians related the cult of phallus with Osiris. When Osiris' body was cut in 13 pieces, Seth scattered them all over Egypt and his wife Isis retrieved all of them except one, his penis, which was swallowed by a fish (see the Legend of Osiris and Isis). The phallus was a symbol of fertility, and the god Min was often depicted ithyphallic (with a penis).
- India: Ancient texts from Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism such as the Vedas reveal moral perspectives on sexuality, marriage and fertility prayers. The epics of ancient India, the Ramayana and Mahabharata, possibly from as early as 1400 BCE, later influenced Chinese, Japanese, Tibetan and South East Asian culture. They indicate that sex was considered a mutual duty between a married couple, but where sex was considered a private affair. The most publicly known sexual literature of India are the texts of the sixty-four arts.
- Mesopotamia: In ancient Mesopotamia, Ishtar was the primary Goddess of life, men and women, nature and fertility, sex, sexual power and birth. Ishtar was also the goddess of war and weapons and any victory was celebrated in her temples with offerings of produce and money as well as through a feast and orgy of sex and fornication with holy temple prostitutes.
- China: In the I Ching (The Book of Changes, a Chinese classic text dealing with what would be in the West termed metaphysics), sexual intercourse is one of two fundamental models used to explain the world. Heaven is described as having sexual intercourse with Earth. The male lovers of early Chinese men of great political power are mentioned in one of the earliest great works of philosophy and literature, the Zhuang Zi.
- Japan: In perhaps the earliest novel in the world, the Genji Monogatari (Tale of Genji), dating back to around the 11th century AD, eroticism is treated as a central part of the aesthetic life of members of the nobility.
- Greece: In ancient Greece, the phallus, often in the form of a herma, was an object of worship as a symbol of fertility. One ancient Greek male idea of female sexuality was that women envied penises of males. Wives were considered as commodity and instruments for bearing legitimate children. They had to compete sexually with eromenoi, hetaeras and slaves in their own homes.
- Rome: Ancient Roman civilization included celebrations associated with human reproductive organs. Over time there emerged institutionalization of voluntary sex as well as prostitution. This resulted in a virtual sexual caste system in Roman civilization – different grades and degrees of sexual relationships. Apart from the legally wedded spouses, a number of males used to have Delicatue, mistresses of wealthy and prominent men. The next were the Famosae, mostly the daughters and even wives of the wealthy families who enjoyed sex for its own sake. There was another class known as Lupae, willing to have sexual union with anyone for a price. Copae were the serving girls in the taverns and inns and who did not mind being hired as bedmates for the night by travelers.
Modern developments
Main article: SexologyIn contemporary academia, sexuality is studied in the fields of sexology and gender and sexuality studies, among many other fields.
Sexology, the study of sexual interests, behavior, and function, covers sexual development and sexual relationships including sexual intercourse. It also documents the sexualities of groups such as the disabled, children, and the elderly.
Alfred Kinsey became interested in the different forms of sexual practices around 1933 when he developed the Kinsey Scale which ranges from 0 to 6, where 0 is exclusively heterosexual and 6 is exclusively homosexual. His Kinsey Reports starting with the publication of Sexual Behavior in the Human Male in 1948 and Sexual Behavior in the Human Female in 1953 contributed to the sexual revolution of the 1960s.
Foucault
The French philosopher Michel Foucault wrote in The History of Sexuality (1976-1984) that the concept of "sexual" activities and sensations is historically (as well as regionally and culturally) determined. It is therefore part of a changing "discourse". The sexual meanings (meanings of the erotic dimension of human sexual experience) are social and cultural constructs. They are made subjective only after cultural and social mediation. As the main force conditioning human relationships, sex is essentially political. In any social context, the construction of a "sexual universe" is fundamentally linked to the structures of power. The construction of sexual meanings is an instrument by which social institutions (religion, marketing, the educational system, psychiatry, etc.) control and shape human relationships.
According to Foucault, sexuality began to be regarded as a conceptual part of human nature in the 19th century. Sexuality began to be used as a means to define normality and its boundaries, and to conceive everything outside those boundaries in the realm of psychopathology. In the 20th century, with the theories of Sigmund Freud and of sexology, the "not-normal" was seen more as a "discontent of civilization" In a well known passage of his work, Foucault noted that the development of the notion of sexuality organized sex as a "fictitious unity" of "disparate parts, functions, behaviours, and feelings with no natural or necessary relation among them"; therefore the conception of what is "natural" is a social construct. To escape such cultural "sexuality", Foucault suggested focusing on "bodies and pleasures".
See also
Footnotes
- ^ Rathus, Spencer A., Jeffrey S. Nevid, and Lois Fichner-Rathus. 2007. Human Sexuality in a World of Diversity. Allyn & Bacon.
- Boccadoro L., Carulli S., (2008) Il posto dell'amore negato. Sessualità e psicopatologie segrete (The place of the denied love. Sexuality and secret psychopathologies - Abstract). Tecnoprint Editrice, Ancona. ISBN 978-88-95554-03-7
- Deleuze and Guattari (1972) Anti-Oedipus pp. 322, 114-5
- ^ Ellen Ross, Rayna Rapp Sex and Society: A Research Note from Social History and Anthropology Comparative Studies in Society and History, Vol. 23, No. 1 (Jan., 1981), pp. 51-72
- Kathleen Doheny: 10 Surprising Health Benefits of Sex. From WebMD. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
- Sexually Transmitted Infections Overview. From University of California Santa Barbara. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
- Dawn Stacey: Contraception. About.com. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
- . Escoffier, Jeffrey. (Editor): Sexual Revolution. Running Press, 2003. ISBN 1560255250. Retrieved 12 October 2009.
- Betty Friedan, Who Ignited Cause in 'Feminine Mystique,' Dies at 85 - The New York Times, February 5, 2006. Retrieved 12 October 2009.
- Joane Nagel (August 2000). "ETHNICITY AND SEXUALITY". Annual Review of Sociology. 26: 107–133. doi:10.1146/annurev.soc.26.1.107.
- Joane Nagel (2001). "Racial, Ethnic, and National Boundaries: Sexual Intersections and Symbolic Interactions". Symbolic Interaction. 24 (2): 123–139. doi:10.1525/si.2001.24.2.123.
- Think Sex from TheAge.com.au. Retrieved 11 October 2009.
- John Russon (2009). Bearing Witness to Epiphany: Persons, Things, and the Nature of Erotic Life. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-1-4384-2504-7.
- What is Psychosexual Development? Pschology from About.com. Retrieved 12 October 2009.
- B. F. Skinner and behaviorism. From essortment. Retrieved 12 October 2009.
- Buss, D.M. (2002) Human mating strategies. Samdunfsokonemen, 4: 48-58.
- Farrell, W. (1988) Why Men Are The Way They Are, New York: Berkley Books
- The Female Fertility Cycle. From SHCS. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- The Male Reproductive Cycle. From Palo Alto Medical Foundation. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- My Fertile Days. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- Anderson SE, Dallal GE, Must A (2003). "Relative weight and race influence average age at menarche: results from two nationally representative surveys of US girls studied 25 years apart". Pediatrics. 111 (4 Pt 1): 844–50. doi:10.1542/peds.111.4.844. PMID 12671122.
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- "Fertility Treatment Less Successful After 35". WebMD. Retrieved July 4 2006.
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- Kidd SA, Eskenazi B, Wyrobek AJ (2001). "Effects of male age on semen quality and fertility: a review of the literature". Fertil. Steril. 75 (2): 237–48. doi:10.1016/S0015-0282(00)01679-4. PMID 11172821.
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- Miller, R., Perlman, D., and Brehm, S.S. Intimate Relationships, 4th Edition, McGrawHill Companies.
- Tall men 'top husband stakes'. BBC News. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- Daniel Nettle: Women’s height, reproductive success and the evolution of sexual dimorphism in modern humans. The Royal Society. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- SIRC Guide to Flirting. What Social Science can tell you about flirting and how to do it. Retrieved 13 October 2009.
- Greene, Robert (2003). The Art of Seduction. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-200119-8.
- "BDSM Terms". A Slave's Heart. Retrieved 2008-01-27.
- Islam Question and Answer - The reasons for capital punishment in Islam
- ILGA:7 countries still put people to death for same-sex acts
- Homosexuality and Islam - ReligionFacts
- Sex and Relationships - Sex - 4Health from Channel 4
- Improve your orgasm: you may have thought your sexual pleasure was the one thing that couldn't get any better. Think again - Sexual Fitness - physiology | Men's Fitness | Find Articles at BNET.com
- Heterosexual Sex. World Sex Explorer. Retrieved 13 October 2009.
- Sex Offenders and Sex Offenses: Overview. From FindLaw. Retrieved 13 October 2009.
- Adultery extra marital sex. From MarriagePartner.com. Retrieved 13 October 2009.
- Autosexuality. From Global Oneness. Retrieved 13 October 2009
- Sex Offenses and Offenders. U.S. Department of Justice. Retrieved 14 October 2009.
- Erwin J. Haeberle: A Brief History of Sexology. Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
- ^ Foucault, M. (1976) The History of Sexuality, Vol I: The Will to Knowledge
- ^ Weeks, Jeffrey (1989). Sexuality and its Discontents; Meanings, Myths, and Modern Sexualities. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-04503-7. pp.176-8
- MARY WEISMANTEL Moche Sex Pots: Reproduction and Temporality in Ancient South America American Anthropologist September 2004, Vol. 106, No. 3, pp. 495-505
- ^ Parker, Richard G. Anthropology & Humanism Quarterly. June 1989, Vol. 14, No. 2, pp. 58-64
- Gayle Rubin (1984) Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality
- Toward a Conversation about Sex in Feminism: A Modest Proposal Vance, Carole S.
- Cáceres The production of knowledge on sexuality in the AIDS era.in Aggleton, Peter; Parker, Richard Bordeaux; Barbosa, Regina Maria (2000). Framing the sexual subject: the politics of gender, sexuality, and power. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-21838-8.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) pp.242-3 - ^ Strozier, Robert M. (2002) Foucault, Subjectivity, and Identity: : Historical Constructions of Subject and Self pp.101-2, 108, 118-120
- Foucault 1976, p.154-5
- Foucault 1976, p.157
External links
- American Sexuality Magazine
- Glossario di sessuologia clinica - Glossary of clinical sexology
- History of Surveys of Sexual Behavior from Encyclopedia of Behavioral Statistics
- International Encyclopedia of Sexuality full text
- Janssen, D. F., Growing Up Sexually. Volume I. World Reference Atlas
- National Sexuality Resource Center
- Durex Global Sex Survey 2005 at data360.org
- POPLINE is a searchable database of the world's reproductive health literature.
- The Continuum Complete International Encyclopedia of Sexuality at the Kinsey Institute
- The Sexuality and Rights Institute
- The South and Southeast Asia Resource Centre on Sexuality
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