This book shows the importance of understanding how gender influences
views on teen pregnancy amongst working and lower middle class Mexican
adolescents.
It demonstrates how teenagers negotiate dominant gendered discourses
related to sexuality, contraception and parenthood, considering if and
when discourses of gender, sexuality, femininity and masculinity may be
shifting and how.
Overall, most teenage boys in this study still refer to their active
sexual practices and their role as provider in the family to define
their reproductive identities, while young women seem to comply with
dominant moral expectations of sexually passive femininity, defined
mainly through motherhood. However, the findings also highlight how
resistance to dominant gender discourses can take place, particularly
with recognition of teenage girls as sexual beings with needs and
desires.
Although the findings generated by this study are from 1994-1997, they
remain relevant, given that in 2017, one in five pregnancies in Mexico
was from a teenage mother.