%0 Journal Article %J J Sex Res %D 2013 %T Sexual scripts among young heterosexually active men and women: continuity and change. %A Masters, N Tatiana %A Casey, Erin %A Wells, Elizabeth A %A Morrison, Diane M %K Adolescent %K Adult %K Female %K Heterosexuality %K Humans %K Interpersonal Relations %K Male %K Sexual Behavior %K Young Adult %X

Whereas gendered sexual scripts are hegemonic at the cultural level, research suggests they may be less so at dyadic and individual levels. Understanding "disjunctures" between sexual scripts at different levels holds promise for illuminating mechanisms through which sexual scripts can change. Through interviews with 44 heterosexually active men and women aged 18 to 25, the ways young people grappled with culture-level scripts for sexuality and relationships were delineated. Findings suggest that, although most participants' culture-level gender scripts for behavior in sexual relationships were congruent with descriptions of traditional masculine and feminine sexuality, there was heterogeneity in how or whether these scripts were incorporated into individual relationships. Specifically, three styles of working with sexual scripts were found: conforming, in which personal gender scripts for sexual behavior overlapped with traditional scripts; exception-finding, in which interviewees accepted culture-level gender scripts as a reality, but created exceptions to gender rules for themselves; and transforming, in which participants either attempted to remake culture-level gender scripts or interpreted their own nontraditional styles as equally normative. Changing sexual scripts can potentially contribute to decreased gender inequity in the sexual realm and to increased opportunities for sexual satisfaction, safety, and well-being, particularly for women, but for men as well.

%B J Sex Res %V 50 %P 409-20 %8 2013 %G eng %N 5 %R 10.1080/00224499.2012.661102 %0 Journal Article %J Soc Work %D 2010 %T Frontline worker responses to domestic violence disclosure in public welfare offices. %A Lindhorst, Taryn %A Casey, Erin %A Meyers, Marcia %K Domestic Violence %K Female %K Humans %K Interviews as Topic %K Poverty %K Social Welfare %K Social Work %X

Although substantial numbers of women seeking Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) report domestic violence, few receive mandated services through the Family Violence Option (FVO). This study used transcripts ofinterviews between welfare caseworkers and their clients to identify and classify the responses made by workers to client disclosures of abuse and to assess the match or mismatch of these responses with FVO policy requirements. Only 22 of 782 client interviews involved the disclosure of abuse to the welfare caseworker. A typology of worker responses was created, from least to most engaged. This typology shows that only half of those who disclosed abuse received assistance from the welfare worker, despite policy mandates that clients receive information on TANF waivers and community resources. This study suggests that problems with implementation of the FVO reflect a systemic reluctance to address issues of violence with women rather than problems of individual workers.

%B Soc Work %V 55 %P 235-43 %8 2010 Jul %G eng %N 3