Woodhull Issues Report on State of Sexual Freedom

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Woodhull Issues Report on State of Sexual Freedom State of Sexual Freedom in the United States 2010 Report WOODHULL FREEDOM FOUNDATION State of Sexual Freedom in the United States 2010 Report WOODHULL FREEDOM FOUNDATION WOODHULL FREEDOM FOUNDATION Copyright 2010 by Woodhull Freedom Foundation www.woodhullfoundation.org All rights reserved. The views expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the Woodhull Freedom Foundation; of its directors, officers, or staff; or of its funders. Acknowlegements A Woodhull Freedom Foundation Report Affirming Sexual Freedom as a Fundamental Human Right We gratefully acknowledge those individuals and organizations who contributed to the State of Sexual Freedom in the United States, 2010 Report Deborah Taj Anapol Mark Kernes Katrina Anderson Betsy Lehrfeld Steven K. Aurand Ricci Levy Barnaby B. Barratt Dan Massey Ted Bernhardt Gaylen Moore Patti Britton Carol Queen Yessenia Cervantes Loretta Ross Sawan Chanthayom SIECUS Melissa Ditmore SisterSong Women of Ariel Dougherty Color Heath Collective Andrew Fogle Sean Strub Alison Gardner RJ Thompson Hardy Haberman James Turner Henry J. Kaiser Lawrence G. Walters Family Foundation Elizabeth Wood Lorraine Kenny Karen Bartlett, M.S. – Editor Erin Kennedy – Assistant Editor Christopher Cunetto – Cover Illustration Drew Ransom – Report Design Contents FORWARD ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................i Our Fundamental Human Right to Sexual Freedom and the State of Sexual Freedom in the United States Report for 2010 ............................................................................................................................................ ii Ricci J. Levy INTRODUCTION Why Sexual Freedom is a Fundamental Human Right ............................................................................................................................................................................ix Barnaby B. Barratt SEXUAL RIGHTS AND MORAL VALUES OF EROTIC EXPRESSION ..................................................................................................................................... 1 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................ 2 Sexual Rights as Human Rights ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................... 3 Sex and Morality.................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................11 The Positive Side of Recreational Sex ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................17 Gaylen Moore THE HUMAN RIGHT TO SEXUAL EXPRESSION ..............................................................................................................................................................................................22 Personal Freedoms and Protections .................................................................................................................................................................................................................................23 Lawrence G. Walters, Esq. Sexual Expression and Identity: The other face of diversity ............................................................................................................................................................33 Carol Queen I Am an Intersex Bisexual Transgender and So Are You .......................................................................................................................................................................38 Dan Massey RELATIONSHIPS AND FAMILY FREEDOMS AND PROTECTIONS .........................................................................................................................................42 Introduction: Sexual Choices .....................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................43 Hardy Haberman Our Human Right to Relationships ......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................45 Deborah Taj Anapol Testimony in Washington, DC on the Right to Family .............................................................................................................................................................................52 Ricci J. Levy COMMERCIAL SEX AND THE HUMAN RIGHT TO WORK .................................................................................................................................................................54 Prosecuting Porn: A Journalist’s Perspective ...................................................................................................................................................................................................55 Mark Kernes The State of Sexual Freedom: Prostitution ............................................................................................................................................................................................................65 Melissa Ditmore THE HUMAN RIGHT TO SEXUALITY EDUCATION ........................................................................................................................................................................................72 Abstinence-Only-Until-Marriage Programs Censor Vital Health Care Information, Jeopardizing Teens’ Health ......................................................................................................................................................73 Lorraine Kenny Youth and Adults Changing Sex Education ............................................................................................................................................................................................................74 Yessenia Cervantes REAL Act Fact Sheet Courtesy of SIECUS ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................75 THE HUMAN RIGHT TO REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE ....................................................................................................................................................................................77 What Is Reproductive Justice ..................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................78 Loretta Ross Disabled Women and Reproductive Justice ...........................................................................................................................................................................................................80 Mia Mingus Emergency Contraception .............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................82 Courtesy of Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation THE HUMAN RIGHT TO SEXUAL HEALTH ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................85 Sexual Health ...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................86 Fourteen Years Later – A Mother’s Story Revisited ..........................................................................................................................................................................88 Patti Britton AIDS Stigma and the Creation of a Viral Underclass ..................................................................................................................................................................................97 Sean Strub MOVING FORWARD AFFIRMING SEXUAL FREEDOM AS A FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN RIGHT ............................................................................................................................................................................................................103
Recommended publications
  • After the Wedding Night: the Confluence of Masculinity and Purity in Married Life Sarah H. Diefendorf a Thesis Submitted in Part
    After the Wedding Night: The Confluence of Masculinity and Purity in Married Life Sarah H. Diefendorf A thesis Submitted in partial fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Master of Arts University of Washington 2012 Committee: Pepper Schwartz Julie Brines Program Authorized to Offer Degree: Department of Sociology University of Washington Abstract After the Wedding Night: The Confluence of Masculinity and Purity in Married Life Sarah H. Diefendorf Chair of the Supervisory Committee: Professor Pepper Schwartz Department of Sociology Purity is congruent with cultural understandings of femininity, but incongruent with normative definitions of masculinity. Using longitudinal qualitative data, this study analyzes interviews with men who have taken pledges of abstinence pre and post marriage, to better understand the ways in which masculinity is asserted within discourses of purity. Building off of Wilkins’ concept of collective performances of temptation and Luker’s theoretical framing of the “sexual conservative” I argue that repercussions from collective performances of temptation carry over into married life; sex is thought of as something that needs to be controlled both pre and post marriage. Second, because of these repercussions, marriage needs to be re-conceptualized as a “verb”; marriage is not a static event for sexual liberals or sexual conservatives. The current study highlights the ways in which married life is affected by a pledge of abstinence and contributes to the theoretical framing of masculinities as fluid. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The author would like to thank Pepper Schwartz and Julie Brines for their pointed feedback and consistent encouragement and enthusiasm for this research. The author would also like to thank both Aimée Dechter and the participants of the 2011-2012 Masters Thesis Research Seminar for providing the space for many lively, helpful discussions about this work.
    [Show full text]
  • Asexuality 101
    BY THE NUMBERS Asexual people (or aces) experience little or no 28% sexual attraction. While most asexual people desire emotionally intimate relationships, they are not drawn to sex as a way to express that intimacy. of the community is 18 or younger ASEXUALITY ISN’T ACES MIGHT 32% Abstinence because of Want friendship, a bad relationship understanding, and Abstinence because of empathy religious reasons Fall in love of the community are between 19 and 21 Celibacy Experience arousal and Sexual repression, orgasm aversion, or Masturbate 19% dysfunction Have sex Loss of libido due to Not have sex age or circumstance Be of any gender, age, Fear of intimacy or background of the community are currently Inability to find a Have a spouse and/or in high school partner children 40% of the community are in college Aromantic – people who experience little or no romantic 20% attraction and are content with close friendships and other non-romantic relationships. Demisexual – people who only experience sexual attraction of the community identify as once they form a strong emotional connection with the person. transgender or are questioning Grey-A – people who identify somewhere between sexual and their gender identity asexual on the sexuality spectrum. 41% Queerplatonic – One type of non-romantic relationship where there is an intense emotional connection going beyond what is traditionally thought of as friendship. Romantic orientations – Aces commonly use hetero-, homo-, of the community identify as part of the LGBT community bi-, and pan- in front of the word romantic to describe who they experience romantic attraction to. Source: Asexy Community Census http://www.tinyurl.com/AsexyCensusResults Asexual Awareness Week Community Engagement Series – Trevor Project | Last Updated April 2012 ACE SPECIFIC Feeling e mpty, isolated, Some aces voice a fear of ISSUES and/or alone.
    [Show full text]
  • Deviant Dreams: Extreme Associates and the Case for Porn
    City University of New York Law Review Volume 10 Issue 1 Winter 2006 Deviant Dreams: Extreme Associates and the Case for Porn Sienna Baskin CUNY School of Law Follow this and additional works at: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/clr Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Sienna Baskin, Deviant Dreams: Extreme Associates and the Case for Porn, 10 N.Y. City L. Rev. 155 (2006). Available at: 10.31641/clr100108 The CUNY Law Review is published by the Office of Library Services at the City University of New York. For more information please contact [email protected]. Deviant Dreams: Extreme Associates and the Case for Porn Acknowledgements The author would like to thank Professor Ruthann Robson, Professor Andrea McArdle, Lena Ramon, and Davim Horowitz. This article is available in City University of New York Law Review: https://academicworks.cuny.edu/clr/vol10/iss1/9 DEVIANT DREAMS: EXTREME ASSOCIATES AND THE CASE FOR PORN, Sienna Baskin* There's a difference between watching entertainment and feeling hey, that's not my, you know, cup of tea. I could do without seeing that for the next [thirty] years of my life, and saying, "You know what? The person who made that should go to prison. "2 [A] person's inclinations and fantasies are his own and beyond the reach of government.3 INTRODUCTION: THE FIRST BATrLE IN THE WAR ON PORN "I guess this means we've won the war on terror," responded one frustrated FBI agent when he learned of the government's new priority for investigations and prosecutions: obscene pornogra- phy.4 Attorney General Gonzales has announced his intention to resurrect the federal obscenity statutes, which have lain virtually unused for a decade, to prosecute purveyors of pornography whose products violate community standards.5 His public statements on the subject make clear that the campaign will target obscenity 1 The term pornography and its abbreviation will be used interchangeably in this essay.
    [Show full text]
  • Global Mapping of Pleasure
    A directory of organizations, programmes, media and people who eroticize safer sex 2nd edition 1 Acknowledgements This publication is a celebration of the many people who have fun, sexy and erotic sex that is also safer sex – their creativity and innovation were the original inspiration for The Pleasure Project and continue to influence our work. The Global Mapping of Pleasure would not exist without the hard work, commitment and generosity of the many people who are profiled within it, who shared their time and ideas with us, and who continue to change people’s lives with their sex- positive approach to safer sex. The Realising Rights Research Programme Consortium (www.realising-rights.org) generously funded this research. We would like to thank the Director, Hilary Standing, of the Institute of Development Studies (IDS), University of Sussex, for facilitating this grant. We would also like to thank Susie Jolly of the IDS Sexuality and Development Programme for her ongoing support for this project and many other aspects of our work. We especially want to thank our volunteer researchers: Arushi Singh (IPPF South Asia, India); Juliet McEachran (Australia); and Lauren Chauvin (Independent Consultant, UK) for their help and dedication. And Lucy Atkin of Colibrí Consulting (USA and Mexico) and Hesperian Publishing, who not only helped with research, but provided feedback, advice and support throughout this project. Finally, Marten Sims deserves a huge round of applause for his fantastic design work and consultancy. Written and edited by Wendy Knerr Editorial and content advisor Anne Philpott Designed by Marten Sims Cover image and similar images Model Rii Photographer OhJo Production House Overdose For disability photos (Roxy) Credit Jon Edge (Wheelchair) Credit Rod MacDonald © The Pleasure Project, 2008 www.thepleasureproject.org The Realising Rights Research Programme Consortium is funded by the United Kingdom Department for International Development (DFID) under grant HD43.
    [Show full text]
  • The Myth of Obsolete Obscenity (20160511) (Do Not Delete) 5/11/2016 1:33 PM
    Kinsley, The Myth of Obsolete Obscenity (20160511) (Do Not Delete) 5/11/2016 1:33 PM THE MYTH OF OBSOLETE OBSCENITY JENNIFER M. KINSLEY* INTRODUCTION ................................................................................. 609 I. BACKGROUND................................................................................ 610 A. Federal Obscenity Laws ................................................... 610 1. Miller v. California..................................................... 611 2. Smith v. California ..................................................... 612 3. Pope v. Illinois ............................................................ 612 B. State Obscenity Laws and Local Ordinances ................... 612 C. Current Scholarship on Obscenity Prosecutions .............. 614 II. OBSCENITY PROSECUTIONS FROM 2000 TO PRESENT .................... 615 A. Federal Prosecutions ....................................................... 615 1. The Bush Administration Prosecutions: Cases Initiated and Concluded from 2003 to 2008 ............. 617 a. Extreme Associates ............................................... 617 b. The Ragsdales ....................................................... 618 c. Patrick J. O’Malley ............................................... 618 d. Jeffrey Kilbride and James Schaffer ..................... 619 e. Karen Fletcher ....................................................... 620 f. Adult DVD Empire................................................ 621 g. The Harb Cousins ................................................
    [Show full text]
  • 1 a Bill for an .Act 05-1607 2 Relating to Education
    01/21/05 [REVISOR ] XX/MD 05-1607 Senators Wiger, Tomassoni and Kelley introduced-­ S.F. No. 772: Referred to the Committee on Education. 1 A bill for an .act 2 relating to education; establishing a student support 3 services advisory committee; requiring school 4 districts to adopt a student support services plan; 5 amending Minnesota Statutes 2004, section 122A.15, by 6 adding a subdivision. 7 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA: 8 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 2004, section 122A.15, is 9 amended by adding a subdivision to read: 10 Subd. 3. [STUDENT SUPPORT SERVICES ADVISORY COMMITTEE; 11 DISTRICT PLAN.] (a) A student support services advisory 12 committee composed of eight members selected by .the commissioner 13 is established under section 15.059. The commissioner must 14 select one committee member from each of the following 15 organizations: 16 (1) the Minnesota Department of Education; 17 (2) the Minnesota School Boards Association; 18 (3) the Board of School Administrators; 19 (4) the Minnesota School Social Work Association; 20 (5) the School Nurse Organization of Minnesota; 21 (6) the Minnesota School Psychologists Association; 22 (7) the Minnesota School Counselors Association; and 23 (8) the Minnesota Association of Resources for Recovery and 24 Chemical Health. 25 (b) The committee must: 26 (1) identify alternatives for integrating student support Section 1 1 01/21/05 [REVISOR ] XX/MD 05-1607 1 services into public schools; 2 (2) recommend support staff to student ratios and best 3 practices for providing student support services premised on 4 valid, widely recognized research; 5 (3) identify the substance and extent of the work that 6 .
    [Show full text]
  • CROSSLING, LOVE L., Ph.D. Abstinence Curriculum in Black Churches: a Critical Examination of the Intersectionality of Race, Gender, and SES
    CROSSLING, LOVE L., Ph.D. Abstinence Curriculum in Black Churches: A Critical Examination of the Intersectionality of Race, Gender, and SES. (2009) Directed by Dr. Kathleen Casey. 243 pp. Current sex education curriculum focuses on pregnancy and disease, but very little of the curriculum addresses the social, emotional, or moral elements. Christian churches have made strides over the last two decades to design an abstinence curriculum that contains a moral strand, which addresses spiritual, mental, social, and emotional challenges of premarital sex for youth and singles. However, many black churches appear to be challenged in four areas: existence, purpose, developmental process, and content of teaching tools at it relates to abstinence curriculum. Existence refers to whether or not a church body deems it necessary or has the available resources to implement an abstinence curriculum. Purpose refers to the overall goals and motivations used to persuade youth and singles. Developmental process describes communicative power dynamics that influence the recognized voices at the decision-making table when designing a curriculum. Finally, content of teaching tools refers to prevailing white middle class messages found in Christian inspirational abstinence texts whose cultural irrelevance creates a barrier in what should be a relevant message for any population. The first component of the research answers the question of why the focus should be black churches by exploring historical and contemporary distinctions of black sexuality among youth and single populations. The historical and contemporary distinctions are followed by an exploration of how the history of black church development influenced power dynamics, which in turn affects the freedom with which black Christian communities communicate about sexuality in the church setting.
    [Show full text]
  • Michel Foucault and the History of Sexuality
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Research Repository The Sexual Experience: Michel Foucault and The History of Sexuality Julie Faith O’Callaghan BA in Sociology and English and Creative Arts Murdoch University Thesis for Bachelor of Arts in Sociology with Honours Murdoch University 2013 i DECLARATION I declare that this thesis is my own account of research and contains as its main content work which has not previously been submitted for a degree at any university or tertiary institution. ….................................................... …..................... ii COPYRIGHT ACKNOWLEDGEMENT I acknowledge that a copy of this thesis will be held at the Murdoch University Library. I understand that, under the provisions s51.2 of the Copyright Act 1968, all or part of this thesis may be copied without infringement of copyright where such a reproduction is for the purposes of study and research. This statement does not signal any transfer of copyright away from the author. Signed: .................................................................... Full Name of Degree: Bachelor of Arts in Sociology with Honours Thesis Title: The Sexual Experience: Michel Foucault and The History of Sexuality Author: Julie Faith O'Callaghan Year: 2013 iii ABSTRACT This thesis offers a discussion of the central concepts informing Michel Foucault's The History of Sexuality project. Through his analysis, Foucault develops concepts in a bid to understand individual experiences of sexuality in different historical periods. His project investigates the repressive and productive effects of power in determining the sexual self. He argues that power and knowledge created new types of sexualities from the seventeen-century onward.
    [Show full text]
  • The Manifestation of Sexual Repression, Gender in Popular Music: a Case Study on Katy Perry
    ISSN 1712-8056[Print] Canadian Social Science ISSN 1923-6697[Online] Vol. 10, No. 2, 2014, pp. 44-49 www.cscanada.net DOI:10.3968/4460 www.cscanada.org The Manifestation of Sexual Repression, Gender in Popular Music: A Case Study on Katy Perry Jia Fei[a],* [a]The Edward R. Murrow College of Communication, Washington State University, WA, USA. INTRODUCTION *Corresponding author. The idea of the repression of sexuality was originally raised by the French social theorist Michel Foucault. It is, Received 8 January 2014; accepted 16 March 2014 in short, a theory stating that sexuality has been repressed Pulished online 15 April 2014 among people, but then a bigger need for pleasure emerged. In contemporary arts, sexuality is always an Abstract unavoidable topic, no matter it is in films, music or Michel Foucault had discussed that the repression of artworks such as paintings and sculptures. In addition, arts sexuality was a manipulation of ideology by dominant such as music are always the communicative organ that group. He stated that sexual repression was nothing connects social structures with musical form (Whiteley, but a hypothesis that allowed the agencies of power 2000, p.36). In this case, my central argument is, how this (bourgeoisies, or males) to verbalize sexuality to satisfy repression of sexuality was transferred to an art formas the their pleasures and desires. On the other hand, women discourses that everyone is so obsessed with. This critical repression has been long existed in popular music paper only focuses on popular music especially in pop culture. The empowerment and independence of women, genre, to see how sexuality is manifested in both lyrics therefore, became a breakthrough in the history of and music videos by connecting with the theory from popular music.
    [Show full text]
  • The 2008 Federal Obscenity Conviction of Paul Little and What It Reveals About Obscenity Law and Prosecutions
    The 2008 Federal Obscenity Conviction of Paul Little and What It Reveals About Obscenity Law and Prosecutions Robert D. Richards* and Clay Calvert** ABSTRACT This Article provides an inside perspective on the 2008 obscenity trial and conviction of veteran adult movie producer Paul Little, who is known in the adult industry as Max Hardcore. Little was sentenced by a federal judge to nearly four years in prison after a twelve-person jury in Tampa, Florida found him guilty of multiple counts of selling and distributing obscene content via the U.S. Mail and Internet. The Article centers around comments and remarks drawn from four exclusive interviews conducted in person by the authors with: (1) Jeffrey Douglas, the California-based attorney who represented and defended Paul Little in United States v. Little; (2) H. Louis Sirkin, the Ohio-based attorney who represented and defended the corporate entities controlled by Paul Little in United States v. Little; (3) Mark Kernes, Senior Editor of Adult Video News, a leading adult entertainment industry trade publication, and the journalist who covered the trial of Paul Little; and (4) Larry Flynt, the publisher of Hustler magazine and head of the LFP, Inc. adult entertainment * Distinguished Professor of Journalism & Law and Founding Co-Director of the Pennsylvania Center for the First Amendment, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA. J.D., The American University, 1987; M.A., Communication, The Pennsylvania State University, 1984; B.A., Communication, The Pennsylvania State University, 1983. Member, State Bar of Pennsylvania. The authors thank Thomas Markey and Patrick Hanifin of The Pennsylvania State University for reviewing an early draft of this Article.
    [Show full text]
  • [494Bba4] Pdf Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It
    pdf Sex At Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, And What It Means For Modern Relationships Christopher Ryan, Cacilda Jetha - pdf free book Download Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships E-Books, Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships pdf read online, Pdf Books Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships, Read Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships Online Free, Christopher Ryan, Cacilda Jetha epub Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships, Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships Free PDF Online, Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships Free PDF Download, Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships by Christopher Ryan, Cacilda Jetha Download, Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships by Christopher Ryan, Cacilda Jetha Download, Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships Ebooks Free, pdf download Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships, Download PDF Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships Free Online, pdf download Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It Means for Modern Relationships, Sex at Dawn: How We Mate, Why We Stray, and What It
    [Show full text]
  • Video Transcript – Webinar: HIV Activists and Caretakers
    Video Transcript – Webinar: HIV Activists and Caretakers Video Begins Visual Description: [00:00:00] Video slide appears displaying white Arial text in front of a solid turquoise background. Text reads “VIDEO WEBINAR natural history dot edu, National Museum of Natural History''. The text is on the top of a Smithsonian text with a sunburst logo. Webinar begins, a woman with happy expressions introducing herself and presenters. The woman has white pale toned skin with light blond combed hair, wearing a sky blue blouse plus a red sweater over her.[00:00:05] Sabrina Sholts: If anyone wants to start trying out the Q&A box to let us know where you are joining from, I would be happy to start to welcome everyone as they enter. It is the nature of this format that you can see and hear our speakers but they cannot see and hear you. I think it would be really nice to know who is joining us and who is out there on the other. -- Otherside. Ok. From the University of Maryland department of epidemiology, Marcia. Leslie, New York City. Thanks, everyone. Thanks for sharing this. This is nice. Robert from the Bronx. Quite a range of diversity. Thank you, thank you. And welcome. more, more. Marilyn was in San Francisco when HIV started. Someone saying hello from Chicago. I used to live in Chicago. Wonderful. All right. We are going to get started. Thank you. Thank you, everyone, for joining us today, and hello. My name is Sabrina Sholts, and I am a Biological Anthropologist and the Curator for the exhibit: Outbreak Epidemics in a Connected World at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History.
    [Show full text]