Prioritising sexuality education in Mississippi and Nigeria: the importance of local actors, policy windows and creative strategy

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Date
2018-03-20
Authors
Kunnuji, M.O.N.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Abstract
Mississippi and Nigeria are two socially conservative places unlikely to prioritise sexuality education. Nonetheless, Mississippi passed a bill in 2011 mandating all school districts to offer sexuality education, and Nigeria approved a national sexuality education curriculum in 2001. To identify the factors that drove the process of prioritisation of sexuality education in each context, we conducted more than 70 semi-structured interviews with nongovernmental organisations/nonprofits, donor organisations and federal and state ministries involved in the prioritisation and implementation of sexuality education in Mississippi and Nigeria. Prioritisation of sexuality education occurred for similar reasons in both Mississippi and Nigeria: (1) local individuals and organisations committed to sexuality education and supported by external actors; (2) the opening of a policy window that made sexuality education a solution to a pressing social problem (teen pregnancy in Mississippi and HIV/AIDS in Nigeria) and (3) strategic action on the part of proponents. We conclude that promoting sexuality education in challenging contexts requires fostering committed local individuals and organisations, identifying external resources to support implementation costs and building on existing relationships of trust between actors, even if those relationships are unrelated to sexuality education.
Description
Staff publications
Keywords
Sexuality education , Nigeria , Mississippi , Policy adoption , Research Subject Categories::SOCIAL SCIENCES::Social sciences::Sociology
Citation
Robinson, R. S., Kunnuji, M., Shawar, Y. R., & Shiffman, J. (2018). Prioritising sexuality education in Mississippi and Nigeria: the importance of local actors, policy windows and creative strategy. Global public health, 13(12), 1807-1819.