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You are here: Home / MPRC People / Monica Caudillo, Ph.D. / Monica Caudillo Publications / Cohort Increases In Sex With Same-Sex Partners: Do Trends Vary by Gender, Race, and Class?

Emma Mishel, Paula England, Jessie Ford, and Monica L Caudillo (In press)

Cohort Increases In Sex With Same-Sex Partners: Do Trends Vary by Gender, Race, and Class?

Gender & Society.

We examine change across U.S. cohorts born between 1920 and 2000 in their probability of having had sex with same-sex partners in the last year and since age 18. Using data from the 1988–2018 General Social Surveys, we explore how trends differ by gender, race, and class background. We find steep increases across birth cohorts in the proportion of women who have had sex with both men and women since age 18, whereas increases for men are less steep. We suggest that the trends reflect an increasingly accepting social climate, and that women’s steeper trend is rooted in a long-term asymmetry in gender change, in which nonconformity to gender norms is more acceptable for women than men. We also find evidence that, among men, the increase in having had sex with both men and women was steeper for black than for white men, and for men of lower socioeconomic status; we speculate that the rise of mass incarceration among less privileged men may have influenced this trend.

Sexual and gender minority, Social and Economic Inequality, Gender, Family, and Social Change, Caudillo, Sexual Minorities, Gender
cohort trends, lesbian, sexual minorities, sexualities, bisexuality
First published online: January 23rd, 2020

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