Abstract

This article examines the political struggle from 1945 to 1999 over the place of sex education in the New Zealand primary school. It begins with the 1945 prohibition on sex education and goes on to chart the various political, legal and community manoeuvres leading up to the introduction of the 1999 health curriculum, which includes sex education for primary schools. Along the way there have been various conflicts but for the time being an uneasy truce prevails between liberals, who achieved the introduction of sex education into the primary school curriculum, and conservatives, who managed to make pupil participation voluntary.

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