2019
DOI: 10.1080/10345329.2019.1642837
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Home is where our story begins: CALD LGBTIQ+ people’s relationships to family

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Cited by 9 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 21 publications
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“…19,39,40 Some LGBTQI+ youth had supportive yet limited conversations with immediate family about sexuality. 43 There were few exceptions of MRY discussing SRH with mothers (none mentioned fathers). 19,32,40 Many MRY discussed SRH with friends, relying on peers for information.…”
Section: Identification Of Studies Via Other Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…19,39,40 Some LGBTQI+ youth had supportive yet limited conversations with immediate family about sexuality. 43 There were few exceptions of MRY discussing SRH with mothers (none mentioned fathers). 19,32,40 Many MRY discussed SRH with friends, relying on peers for information.…”
Section: Identification Of Studies Via Other Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A common theme across studies was experiences of silence and shame. Stigma surrounding sex, 21,[32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39] pregnancy, 34,36,[40][41][42] STIs, 6,19,36 relationships, 33 and sexuality 43,44 were common within participants' communities and families. MRY understandings of shame were gendered; women were consistently the subject of shame.…”
Section: Silence and Shamementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…If a population is more visible, then they are more likely to be a target for all police encounters, including community policing. Whether it is because of unsafe home environments LGBTIQ+ people; Asquith et al 2019Asquith et al , 2020Dwyer 2014), overcrowding at home (CALD, working class and Indigenous peoples; Dench et al 2006;McCarty 2010;Zufferey and Chung 2015), the desire to socialise without parental and family oversight (youth and disabled people; Lauger 2014;Mill et al 2010;Slater 2013), or simply not having a home to escape police attention (Braga 2010;McNamara et al 2013;Piquero 2010), some vulnerable people are more likely to be out in public. As such, they will encounter police more often than those with the privilege of conducting their criminal activity behind the safety of locked doors (homes or businesses).…”
Section: Conceptsmentioning
confidence: 99%