Exploring young people's interpretations of female genital mutilation in the UK using a community-based participatory research approach

BMC Public Health
Saadye AliSelena Gray

Abstract

Female genital mutilation (FGM) is a deeply-rooted cultural practice mainly undertaken in Africa, the Middle East and Asian countries. Evidence to date suggests that although first-generation migrants to the West are abandoning FGM, the custom continues in some places, albeit in small numbers. This study examined how young people living in FGM affected communities in the United Kingdom (UK), interpreted and explained FGM. A community-based participatory research (CBPR) approach was used to recruit and train nine young people aged 15-18 as co-researchers. These comprised eight females and one male from second-generation FGM affected communities, living in Bristol. The co-researchers then undertook focus groups and semi-structured interviews with twenty participants aged 13-15 living in Bristol, Cardiff and Milton Keynes. The qualitative data from the training workshops, interviews and focus groups were collected and analysed using thematic analysis. There were conflicting views among participants. Some perceived FGM as a historical tradition that was of very little, if any, relevance to them. In contrast, others perceived that the more archaic, cultural interpretation of FGM, more commonly shared by older generations, had been s...Continue Reading

References

Nov 26, 2002·International Journal of Gynaecology and Obstetrics : the Official Organ of the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics·R J CookM F Fathalla
Oct 1, 2004·ANS. Advances in Nursing Science·Patricia A HolkupClarann Weinert
Dec 25, 2007·The Journal of Adolescent Health : Official Publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine·Sarah Flicker, Adrian Guta
May 12, 2010·The American Psychologist·Seth J SchwartzJosé Szapocznik

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