Abstract

This paper explores sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) among young people, identifying intersecting factors that create inequities in access to services, health-seeking behaviour, and ultimately health outcomes. Based on qualitative interviews with young people in the Maldives, it demonstrates how these intersectional experiences are contrary to what is often assumed in official data, policies, and services. Three factors were found to shape young people’s experiences: marital status, gender, and urban/rural differences. Non-marital sexual activity is illegal in the Maldives, but it is somewhat expected of unmarried men, while unmarried women are stigmatised for being sexually active. Although access to SRH services is restricted for all unmarried people, young women face additional difficulties, as the risk of being exposed is much greater in small island communities. Maldivian island communities are extremely small and characterised by an inward-looking culture that exerts considerable social pressure, particularly on unmarried women. For an unmarried woman, being known to be sexually active, or worse, pregnant outside of marriage, has severe social consequences including stigma and isolation from the community, and their own family. This concern is more prevalent among rural young women, as they live in smaller communities where stigma is inescapable. The need to avoid public scrutiny and humiliation contributes to making unsafe abortion a common solution for many unintended pregnancies. Failure to acknowledge these intersecting factors in SRHR experience and access has led to inequities among an already overlooked population, shaping their experiences, knowledge, health-seeking behaviour, and health outcomes.

Highlights

  • Sexuality is a moral issue in most contexts, making sexual health an uncomfortable topic for many

  • This paper explores sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) among young people, identifying intersecting factors that create inequities in access to services, health-seeking behaviour, and health outcomes

  • When the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) declaration called for universal access to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services, most of the Muslimmajority countries in attendance endorsed the declaration, but reserved the right to implement it within their legal framework.[7]

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Summary

Introduction

Sexuality is a moral issue in most contexts, making sexual health an uncomfortable topic for many. Sexual health, which comprises the non-procreative health aspects of sexuality, can be difficult for politicians and policymakers to address. When the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) declaration called for universal access to sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services, most of the Muslimmajority countries in attendance endorsed the declaration, but reserved the right to implement it within their legal framework.[7] Such reservations contribute to making SRH services legally inaccessible for unmarried people, a situation compounded by policy silence within most Islamic countries.[8] Reluctance to acknowledge “illicit” (e.g. non-marital or same-sex) sexual activity has led to inadequate responses to pertinent SRH issues such as HIV/AIDS in many Islamic countries in Asia and the Middle East.[9] Policy and service environments created and sustained by conservative policies can discourage people from seeking services, which can lead governments to underestimate prevalence and engender programmatic complacency.[9]

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