학술논문

Addressing Menstrual Stigma through Sex Education in England- Taking a Sociomaterial Turn
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Evaluative
Author
Kate Bowen-Viner (ORCID 0000-0003-1191-2593); Debbie Watson (ORCID 0000-0001-5467-3604); Jon Symonds (ORCID 0000-0002-6346-1037)
Source
Sex Education: Sexuality, Society and Learning. 2024 24(1):76-91.
Subject
United Kingdom (England)
Language
English
ISSN
1468-1811
1472-0825
Abstract
Menstruation and menstrual stigma have recently attracted the attention of education policymakers in England. In 2019, the Department for Education (DfE) published new guidance on delivering relationships, sex and health education that included teaching about menstrual wellbeing and in 2020 made menstrual products freely available in all state-funded primary and secondary schools in England. The DfE argue that these dual interventions are important for tackling menstrual stigma by normalising menstruation in school. However, these interventions emphasise the management of menstruation in terms of physical health while this article argues that foregrounding how menstruation features in young people's everyday experiences and routines could also be important for addressing stigma. This theory-focussed paper invites a turn away from a humanist positioning on menstruation and menstrual stigma. It discusses existing human-centred research on menstruation and draws on ideas from relational sociomaterial theory to highlight how researching the role of material things in young people's engagements with menstruation can influence understandings about menstrual stigma and young people.