Sexual and reproductive health and rights through the lens of belonging : Intersectional perspectives on disability, gender, and adolescence in Tanzania
Abstract
This dissertation uses sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) as a lens through which contextualized understandings of the intersection of disability, gender, and adolescence can be advanced, and discusses the current theoretical constructs of disability and development. The dissertation study counteracted the coloniality of knowledge production by exploring the perspectives of 199 Tanzanian adolescent females with disabilities. The theoretical inspirations of this qualitative abductive research were the social and human rights models of disability and the concept of intersectionality. I investigated cross-disability perceptions by using the participatory disability research approach and the method of empathy-based stories.
The findings, reported in three original research articles, show that reali-zation of SRHR is based on a sense of humanness and belongingness. The no-tion of belonging was crucial for explaining the perspectives of the studied ado-lescents in the sense that sexual and reproductive health (SRH) entitlements are activated and sometimes constrained by belonging to familial and community networks. The notion of becoming in turn illustrated the potentiality of social personhood, which mediates inclusion and exclusion related to SRH, well-being, and entitlements. Additionally, singular understanding of adolescent SRHR was considered a disruption of the social norms of becoming, as were negative sexual and reproductive health outcomes. Together, these created a detrimental cycle that compromised the studied adolescents’ belonging to the social networks that sustain their SRH. The study suggests that African com-munitarianism has the potential to reaffirm the worth of the studied adoles-cents while compelling moral obligations towards their SRH.
The theoretical and methodological contributions of this dissertation are based on empirical research. The existing models of disability are enriched by the thesis of belonging. Relational epistemic safe spaces are also proposed as a methodological approach for centering marginalized voices and revealing in-dividualist, colonial, ableist, ageist, and gendered assumptions of voice in re-search and in international development practices. This contribution is timely, as disability inclusion is gaining momentum as a globalized development agenda and adolescent SRH face multiple challenges in Tanzania and beyond.
Main Author
Format
Theses
Doctoral thesis
Published
2023
Series
Subjects
ISBN
978-951-39-9680-2
Publisher
Jyväskylän yliopisto
The permanent address of the publication
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-951-39-9680-2Use this for linking
ISSN
2489-9003
Language
English
Published in
JYU Dissertations
Contains publications
- Artikkeli I: Mesiäislehto, V., Katsui, H., & Sambaiga, R. (2021). Disparities in Accessing Sexual and Reproductive Health Services at the Intersection of Disability and Female Adolescence in Tanzania. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(4), Article 1657. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18041657
- Artikkeli II: Mesiäislehto, V. Rethinking gender-based violence and access to sexual and reproductive health services through the perspectives of Tanzanian adolescent females with disabilities. In review.
- Artikkeli III: Mesiäislehto, V., Lehmuskoski, M., Katsui, H., & Sambaiga, R. (2022). Menstrual pain realities of young females with disabilities in Tanzania : Towards a nuanced understanding of pain and embodiment. In H. Katsui, & V. Mesiäislehto (Eds.), Embodied Inequalities in Disability and Development (pp. 35-61). African Sun Media. DOI: 10.52779/9781991201812/02
Copyright© The Author & University of Jyväskylä