This articleneeds additional citations forverification.(December 2018) |
Premarital sexis sex before marriage. Premarital sex is sex between two people who are not married to each other. Premarital sex is considered asinby a number ofreligionsand also considered amoral issuewhich istabooin manycultures.Since theSexual Revolution of the 1960s,it has become accepted by certain liberal movements, especially inWestern countries.A 2014Pew studyon globalmoralityfound that premarital sex was considered particularly unacceptable in "MuslimMajority Countries ", such asMalaysia,JordanandPakistan,each having over 90% disapproval, while people inWestern Europeancountries were the most accepting, withSpain,Germany,andFranceexpressing less than 10% disapproval.[2]
Definition
editUntil the 1950s,[3]"premarital sex" referred to sexual relations between two people prior to marrying each other.[4]During that period, it was the norm in Western societies for men and women to marry above the age of 21, and there were no considerations that one who had sex would not marry. The term was used instead offornication,which had negative connotations,[3]and was closely related to the concept and approval ofvirginity,which issexual abstinenceuntil marriage.
The meaning has since shifted to refer to any sexual relations a person has prior to marriage and removing the emphasis on the relationship of the people involved.[4]The definition has a degree ofambiguity.It is not clear whether sex between individualslegally forbidden from marryingor the sexual relations of one uninterested in marrying would be considered premarital.[3]
Alternative terms for premarital sex have been suggested, includingnon-marital sex(which overlaps withadultery),youthful sex,adolescent sex,andyoung-adult sex.These terms also suffer from a degree of ambiguity, as the definition ofhaving sexdiffers from person to person.[3]
Prevalence
editIn modern Western cultures, social value ofsexual abstinencebefore marriage has declined. Historically, a significant portion of people had engaged in premarital sex, although the number willing to admit to this was not always high. In a study conducted in the United States, 61 percent of men and 12 percent of women born prior to 1910 admitted to having premarital sex; thisgender disparitymay have been caused by cultural double standards regarding the admission of sexual activity, or by men frequentingprostitutes.[3]
Starting in the 1920s, and especially afterWorld War II,premarital sex became more common, particularly among women. By the end of the 20th century, between 75 and 80 percent of Americans had experienced sexual intercourse before the age of 22. This has been attributed to numerous causes, including the increasing median age at marriage and the widespread availability of efficientcontraceptives.[3]
According to a 2001UNICEFsurvey, in 10 out of 12 developed nations with available data, more than two-thirds of young people have had sexual intercourse while still in their teens. In Denmark, Finland, Germany, Iceland,Norway,the United Kingdom and theUnited States,the proportion is over 80%. In Australia, theUnited Kingdomand the United States, approximately 25% of 15-year-olds and 50% of 17-year-olds have sex.[5]In a 2005Kaiser Family Foundationstudy of US teenagers, 29% of teens reported feeling pressure to have sex, 33% of sexually active teens reported "being in a relationship where they felt things were moving too fast sexually", and 24% had "done something sexual they didn't really want to do".[6]Several polls have indicatedpeer pressureas a factor in encouraging both girls and boys to have sex.[7][8]
A majority of Americans have had premarital sex, according to a 2007 article in Public Health Reports. This is true for current young adults and also young adults in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Data from the National Survey of Family Growth indicate that in 2002, 77% of Americans had sex by age 20, and of that percent, 75% had premarital sex. Of women who were born between 1949 and 1978, approximately 91% had premarital sex by age 30, and of women who were born between 1939 and 1948, 82% of them had had premarital sex by age 30.[9]
When comparing the General Social Survey of 1988–1996 to the one of 2004–2012, researchers found that participants of 2004–2012 did not report more sexual partners since the age of 18, nor more frequent sex or sex partners during the past year than those respondents of the previous survey. There appears to be no substantial change in sexual behavior contrasting the earlier era to the current one. Current-era respondents were more likely to report having sex with a casual date or friend than reporting having sex with a spouse or regular partner.[10]From 1943 to 1999, young women's approval towards premarital sex increased from 12% to 73%, and from 40% to 79% among young men. The percentage of people who felt guilt around premarital sex also decreased during this period. As of 2005, less than 25% of people believe premarital sex is “always or almost always” wrong.[11]
Gender differences
editWithin the United States, acohort studyof young adults in university found that men self-report more permissive attitudes about casual sex than women.[12]Another study found university students can be grouped by their ideal relationships—those who express a desire for sex exclusively in a committed partnership have fewer hookups and "friends with benefits" partners than those categorised as desiring "flexible" relationships and recreational sex.[13]
A 2006 study that analysed theToledo Adolescent Relationships Studyfound that more boys report having non-dating sexual partners than girls. Of this sample, a third of boys only have had sex with their romantic partner. A third of boys who have had sex with a partner they are not dating within the past year wished for the girl to be their girlfriend.[14]Many young adults are more likely to engage in sex with romantic partners than with casual acquaintances or "friends with benefits."[15]
A 2011 study that surveyed young adults about their emotional reactions after premarital sexual encounters found that men reported more positive and fewer negative emotional reactions, and both men and women reported that the experience was largely more positive than negative.[16]Women reported that condom use was associated with fewer positive and more negative emotional reactions, and for men condom use was associated with fewer negative emotional reactions.[16]A 23-year study in a Human Sexuality class investigated gender differences in men and women's reactions to their first sexual experience. In the earlier years of the study, men reported more pleasure and greater anxiety than women, while women reported more feelings of guilt than men. Cohort studies carried out over 23 years found that in later years, women expressed greater pleasure and less guilt. The differences between emotional reactions among men and women decreased slightly during the 23 years.[17]Such decreases in differences to first sexual intercourse may be a result of the increasing normality of premarital sex in America. An international online sex survey compared responses of residents of 37 countries against World Economic Forum figures for gender equality in those countries, finding that countries with high gender equality had respondents report more casual sex, a greater number of sex partners, younger ages for first sex, and greater tolerance of premarital sex.[18]
In some countries, gender differences with premarital sex can be linked to virginity. In India, a woman may undergo a "virginity test"on her wedding night where she can be banished by her husband or subject to an honor killing if found she is no longer a virgin. Men are not subjected to this same test and could get away with having premarital sex.[19]In Iran, if a husband finds out his wife had premarital sex, it can be used as grounds for divorce. Therefore,hymen reconstructionsurgery is not uncommon for women who wish to prove their virginity.[20]
Ethnicity differences
editDifferent ethnic and cultural groups in America have varied religiosity and sexual attitudes. A study with college participants found that Asians had more conservative sexual attitudes compared to Hispanics and Euro-Americans. Hispanics reported sexual attitudes similar to that of Euro-Americans. Asian, Hispanic, and Euro-American women with high levels of spirituality were found to have a correlation between conservative sexual attitudes and perceived religiosity. Religiosity and religious fundamentalism most strongly predicted conservative sexual attitudes in Euro-Americans and Asians.[21]
In theIndiancity ofMumbai,research showed that among college-age students, 3% of females affirmed having premarital sex and 26% of males affirmed having premarital sex.[22]Population Council, an international NGO, released a working report in 2006 showing similar statistics nationally in India, with fewer than ten percent of young females reporting having had premarital sex, compared with 15% to 30% of young males.[23]InPakistan,11% of men were reported as having participated in pre-marital sex, although a greater percentage, 29% reported having participated in non-marital sex.[24]
Safe sex practices
editPeople who have premarital sex are recommended by health professionals to take precautions to protect themselves againstsexually transmitted infections(STIs) such asHIV/AIDS.[25]There is also a risk of anunplanned pregnancyinheterosexualrelationships.[26]Around the world,sex educationprograms are run to teach school students aboutreproductive health,safe sex,sexual abstinence,andbirth control.
Sexual activity among unmarried people who do not have access to information about reproductive health and birth control can increase the rate ofteenage pregnanciesand contraction ofsexually transmitted infections.The rates of teenage pregnancy vary and range from 143 per 1000 girls in some sub-Saharan African countries to 2.9 per 1000 girls in South Korea. The rate for the United States is 52.1 per 1000, the highest in the developed world, and about four times the European Union average.[5][27]The teenage pregnancy rates between countries must take into account the level of generalsex educationavailable and access to contraceptive options.
Religion
editViews on premarital sex are often shaped by religious teachings and beliefs, in part because ancient religious texts forbid it.[28][29]People who actively practice religion are less likely to engage in premarital sex or at least go longer before having sex for the first time.[28][29]MuslimsandHindusare less likely to report having premarital sex thanChristians,Jews,andBuddhists.[28]Islamhas the greatest effect of attitudes on premarital sex. People in predominantly Muslim societies have the lowest report of engaging in premarital sex.[28]A study published in 2013 found that over 60% of Muslims reported to have had sex before marriage, compare to 65% of Hindus, 71% of Christians (primarily in Europe and North America), 84% of Jewish and over 85% of Buddhists who reported to have had sex before marriage.[28]Christianity,Judaism,andIslamhave strict rules about specific behaviors and sex outside of marriage, in contrast, "Buddhism does not have similarly strict rules about specific behaviors".[28][30]Students who attend a faith-based (predominantly Christian) university view premarital sexual activity more negatively than students who do not.[31]
Cultural views
editThe cultural acceptability of premarital sex varies between individuals, cultures and time periods. Western cultures have traditionally been disapproving of it, on occasions forbidding it. In other cultures, such as theMuria peopleofMadhya Pradesh,sexuality prior to marriage is accepted and at times expected.[3]
Individual views within a given society can vary greatly, with expectations ranging from totalabstinenceto frequentcasual sex.These views are dependent on the holders'value system,as formed by their parents, religion, friends, experiences, and in many cases the media.[3]Unmarriedcohabitationand births outside marriage have increased in many Western countries during the past few decades. Economist Jeremy Greenwood (2019, Chp. 4) discusses how technological progress in contraception led to a rise in premarital sex and less stigmatization by parents, churches, and governments. He argues that singles weigh the cost (a potential pregnancy) and benefit of premarital sex. As contraception improved the cost of premarital sexual activity fell. Parents and social institutions also weigh the cost and benefit of socialization. Technological improvement in contraception reduced the benefit of socialization because premarital sexual activity was no longer as risky in terms of unwanted pregnancies, which placed a strain on parents and social institutions. As a result, there was social change.
United Kingdom
editSex before the public marriage ceremony was normal in theAnglican Churchuntil theHardwicke Marriage Act of 1753,which for the first time required all marriages in England and Wales occur in theirparish church.(The law also applied toCatholics,butJewsandQuakerswere exempt.) Before its enactment couples lived and slept together after theirbetrothalor "the spousals", which was considered a legal marriage. Until the mid-1700s it was normal and acceptable for the bride to be pregnant at thenuptials,the later public ceremony for the marriage. The Marriage Act combined the spousals and nuptials, and by the start of the 19th centurysocial conventionprescribed that brides be virgins at marriage. Illegitimacy became more socially discouraged, with first pregnancies outside marriage declining from 40% to 20% during the Victorian era. At the start of the 21st century, the figure was back up to 40%.[32]
In the United Kingdom, births outside marriage were up to 47.6% by 2012.[33]In 2014, only 13% of the population found premarital sex unacceptable.[2]
United States
editDuring the colonial period, premarital sex was publicly frowned upon but privately condoned to an extent. Unmarried teenagers were often allowed to spend the night in bed together, though some measures such asbundlingwere sometimes attempted to prevent sexual intercourse. Even though premarital sex was somewhat condoned, having a child outside wedlock was not. If a pregnancy resulted from premarital sex, the young couple were expected to marry. Marriage and birth records from the late 1700s reveal that between 30 and 40 percent of New England brides were pregnant before marriage.[34]
The growing prevalence of the automobile, and corresponding changes in dating practices, caused premarital sex to become more prevalent.Alfred Kinseyfound that American women who became sexually mature during the 1920s were much less likely to be virgins at marriage than those who became mature before World War I. A majority of women during the 1920s under the age of 30 were nonetheless virgins at marriage, however, and half of those who were not only had sex with their fiancés.[35]A 1938 survey of American college students found that 52% of men and 24% of women had had sex. 37% of women surveyed reported being virgins but believed sex outside marriage was acceptable.[36]Prior to the middle of the 20th century, sexuality was generally constrained. Sexual interactions between people without plans to marry was considered unacceptable, withbetrothalslightly lessening the stigma. However, premarital sex was still frowned upon.[3]
Beginning in the 1950s, as premarital sex became more common, the stigma attached to it lessened for many people. In 1969, 70% of Americans disapproved of premarital sex, but by 1973 this number had dropped to 50%.[37]By 2000, roughly a third of couples in the United States had lived together prior to marriage. During the second half of the twentieth century, premarital sex has remained steady for men, but 60% more women lost their virginity prior to marriage during this same period.[38]This has altered the traditionalnuclear family,with half of all children living with asingle parentat some point in their life.[38]
During this period ofsexual liberation,sexual media andpornographybecame more prevalent and normalized premarital sex. People who watched pornography viewed both adult and teenage premarital sex as societally acceptable.[39]
However, premarital sex was considered unacceptable by 30% of the population in a 2014 study, while 29% found it acceptable, and 36% considered it not a moral issue.[3][2]
Studies
editAccording to a 2004 peer-reviewed study published in theJournal of Marriage and Familyfound that women who have more than one premarital sexual relationship have a higher likelihood in the long run of disruptions if ever married, with this effect being the "strongest for women who have multiple premarital co-residential unions".[40]Kahn and London (1991) found that premarital sex and divorce are positively correlated.[41]
Law
editIn December 2022Indonesia's parliamentpassed a bill that partially criminalizessex outside marriage andcohabitation.[42]Government officials have stated that the new criminal code respects privacy and human rights, due to the law being codified and complaint based, which can only be filed by a spouse or parents or children. With the code, government expected that local law enforcement will not invade privacy due to being codified and there will be no more local regulation sweeping power to their local law enforcement. "When these articles are regulated in the criminal code, there would definitely be no raids," deputy minister of theMinistry of Law and Human Rightssaid. He explained that so far, there have been regulations in several regions based on which, officers of the Public Order Agency (Satpol PP) have carried out raids at hotels and inns. After the articles are regulated in the criminal code and an explanation is provided, those regulations that are beneath the law will all be revoked, he said.[43]Indonesia is predominantly Muslim.[44][45]
See also
editReferences
editCitations
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- ^abJung, Jong Hyun (2015-07-20)."A Cross-national Analysis of Religion and Attitudes toward Premarital Sex: Do Economic Contexts Matter?".Sociological Perspectives.59(4): 798–817.doi:10.1177/0731121415595428.S2CID147856380.
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- ^abAsadi, Muhammed (2015-01-02)."The Sexuality Transition: Premarital Sex, the Nuclear Family, and" Doing "Gender".Women's Studies.44(1): 23–53.doi:10.1080/00497878.2014.971216.ISSN0049-7878.S2CID144788632.
- ^Wright, Paul J. (January 2015)."Americans' Attitudes Toward Premarital Sex and Pornography Consumption: A National Panel Analysis".Archives of Sexual Behavior.44(1): 89–97.doi:10.1007/s10508-014-0353-8.ISSN0004-0002.PMID25273378.S2CID29088118.
- ^Teachman, Jay (2003). "Premarital Sex, Premarital Cohabitation, and the Risk of Subsequent Marital Dissolution Among Women".Journal of Marriage and Family.65(2): 444–455.doi:10.1111/j.1741-3737.2003.00444.x.
Women who cohabit prior to marriage or who have premarital sex have an increased likelihood of marital disruption. Considering the joint effects of premarital cohabitation and premarital sex, as well as histories of pre-marital relationships, extends previous research. The most salient finding from this analysis is that women whose intimate premarital relationships are limited to their husbands—either premarital sex alone or premarital cohabitation—do not experience an increased risk of divorce. It is only women who have more than one intimate pre-marital relationship who have an elevated risk of marital disruption. This effect is strongest for women who have multiple premarital coresidental unions.
- ^Teachman, Jay (2003). "Premarital Sex, Premarital Cohabitation, and the Risk of Subsequent Marital Dissolution Among Women".Journal of Marriage and Family.65(2): 444–455.doi:10.1111/j.1741-3737.2003.00444.x.
The literature on the relationship between pre-marital intercourse and divorce is limited. Kahn and London (1991) found a relatively strong positive relationship between the two. They suggested, as is the case for premarital cohabitation, that the relationship may be due to either selectivity on preexisting characteristics or altered perceptions of marriage and alternatives to marriage that occur as the result of engaging in premarital sex.
- ^"Indonesia passes legislation banning sex outside marriage".the Guardian.2022-12-06.Retrieved2022-12-13.
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