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Affirming Sexuality
The South and Southeast Asia Resource Centre on Sexuality hosted a
discussion on Affirming Sexuality on December 15, 2006 (4 to 6
pm) at Committee Room 1, India International centre, New Delhi, India.
The focus of the discussion was set in following terms:
Sexuality can bring misery, poverty and exacerbate gender
inequalities. This happens through sexual violence, HIV/AIDS, maternal
mortality, or marginalisation of those who break the rules, such as
non-macho men, single women, sex workers, people with same-sex
sexualities, and transgender people. Sexuality can also bring joy,
affirmation, and well-being. How can we make possible more joy and less
misery?
Susie Jolly spoke about sexuality and development focussing
specifically on examples from India and other countries in Asia.
Prabha Nagaraja presented examples from TARSHI's telephone
helpline on sexuality on how addressing issues of pleasure is key to
well-being and the assertion of sexual rights.
Sumit Baudh reflected on the articulation of sexual rights in
the ongoing court case challenging the constitutional validity of
Section 377, Indian Penal Code.
Susie Jolly also presented the new BRIDGE Cutting
Edge Pack on 'Gender and Sexuality' that hopes to inspire thinking
and action on these questions. The pack contains an Overview of the
issues, a 'tool box' of summaries of key texts, case studies, guides,
and manuals, and an ‘In Brief’ bulletin summing up the key ideas in
a few short articles.
The discussion was attended by about 25-30 people, a mix of students,
professionals like lawyers and journalists, and others from civil
society organisations.
More about the Speakers:
Susie Jolly is Gender Communications Officer at BRIDGE,
Institute of Development Studies (IDS), UK. Together with Andrea
Cornwall, she is spearheading IDS work on sexuality. Previously to
working at IDS she had lived in China for six years, managing poverty
alleviation programmes for the UNDP, and joining in local women's rights
and sexual rights activism.
Prabha Nagaraja has over ten years of experience talking to
callers about sexuality on the Talking About Reproductive and Sexual
Health Issues (TARSHI) helpline. She is Manager Programmes at TARSHI and
supervises and conducts sexuality trainings.
Sumit Baudh is qualified as Advocate (Delhi Bar), and
Solicitor (non-practicing, England and Wales). He is the Senior
Programme Associate at the South and Southeast Asia Resource Centre on
Sexuality.
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