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At a time when concerns about sexual violence, online harms and the efficacy of Relationships and Sex Education (RSE) frameworks are at the forefront of public discourse, this book offers a timely and necessary intervention. Presenting the concept of ‘safe uncertainty’ as a transformative framework for understanding adolescent intimacies and relationships, authors Setty and Hunt critique current deficit models in relationships and sex education in place of a more nuanced engagement with digital intimacies, online sexual learning and sex media, healthy relationships, gender and consent.
Traditional approaches to RSE, while well-intentioned, can reduce complex social and emotional dynamics to simplistic binaries, leaving young people ill-equipped to navigate the inherent ambivalences and ambiguities of intimacy and relationality. Drawing on original research and case studies from the authors’ practice, this text demonstrates how safe uncertainty acknowledges ambiguity and ambivalence as integral parts of relationships and intimacy and involves creating environments where young people can explore their perspectives and experiences without fear of judgment or rigid moral or legal solutions. Aligned with a broader need for relational, developmental and contextual approaches to understanding adolescent intimacies, Setty and Hunt explore how this framework encourages educators, policymakers and researchers to move beyond knowledge-transfer models and instead focus on equipping young people with the skills to navigate uncertainty in ways that promote emotional resilience and ethical decision-making as sexual citizens.
Connecting the concept of safe uncertainty with critical debates on consent, gender and digital culture, this timely contribution bridges gaps between research, practice and policy on both a national and an international scale.
Introduction: Creating space for uncertainty
This could not be a more timely book. The recent media focus on issues such as misogyny and the harmful sexual behaviours that this can result in has placed educators in a position where they need to consider how to tackle these. As Setty and Hunt contend, often the media focus on cases can create knee-jerk approaches that react to the latest moral panic. Through their research, they have identified that existing approaches to informing and awareness raising do little to address harmful sexual behaviours and that a different approach is needed. What this book argues is a different approach to engaging young people in these conversations, one based on relational education principles to hold space for conversations on what are often complex and challenging topics. This book goes beyond providing a theoretical argument for a different approach but offers an accessible and practical model for reimagining relationships and sex education. Their approach weaves academic literature with practical experiences from their work in schools. This is an academically rigorous yet engagingly written book that speaks to both academics and practitioners alike and is a must-read for anyone engaging with young people.
Emily Setty is Associate Professor in Criminology at the University of Surrey, UK.
Jonny Hunt is a Senior Lecturer in Applied Social Sciences, Childhood and Youth Studies, at the University of Bedfordshire, UK.