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Dive into the research topics where June Larkin is active.

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Featured researches published by June Larkin.


Health Promotion Practice | 2010

Survey Design From the Ground Up: Collaboratively Creating the Toronto Teen Survey

Sarah Flicker; Adrian Guta; June Larkin; Susan Flynn; Alycia Fridkin; Robb Travers; Jason D. Pole; Crystal Layne

The Toronto Teen Survey is a community-based participatory research study whose aim is to gather information on the accessibility and relevance of sexual health services for diverse groups of urban youth (13 to 17 years of age). This information will be used to develop a proactive, citywide strategy to improve sexual health outcomes for Toronto adolescents. In this article, the authors focus on the processes of collaboratively developing a survey tool with youth, academics, and community stakeholders. An overview of the project and examples from the design stage are provided. In addition, recommendations are given toward developing best practices when working with young people on research and survey design.


Sex Education | 2004

Visualizing the politics of innocence in the age of AIDS

Claudia Mitchell; Shannon Walsh; June Larkin

We are concerned with the ways in which social constructions of age can contribute to reducing or exacerbating the vulnerability of young people, and for this reason we refer to the issue as one of ‘the politics of innocence’. The focus of this paper is on gender, youth and HIV prevention/AIDS awareness in the context of South Africa and investigates the uses (and abuses) of images of ‘childhood’, ‘youth’ and ‘adolescence’ in the age of AIDS. Notwithstanding the particular case of South Africa where the incidence of new cases of HIV infection amongst young people is at crisis proportions, the impetus for our work on the visual representations of youth, gender and AIDS comes out of a recognition of the increasing risk of youth to sexually transmitted infections, HIV and AIDS, and within that the particular vulnerability, worldwide, of young women.


Health Education Journal | 2012

Peer Sexual Health Education: Interventions for Effective Programme Evaluation.

Gobika Sriranganathan; Denise Jaworsky; June Larkin; Sarah Flicker; Lisa Campbell; Susan Flynn; Jesse Janssen; Leah Erlich

Peer education is used as a health promotion strategy in a number of areas, including sexual health. Although peer education programmes have been around for some time, published systematic evaluations of youth sexual health peer education programmes are rare. This article discusses the advantages and disadvantages of youth sexual health peer education programmes, the importance of programme evaluation, and strategies for developing effective programme evaluation tools. The value of conducting both process (programme delivery) and outcome (programme impact) evaluation is examined as well as methods for conducting these forms of assessment. Considering the wide range of peer education programmes and the diversity of communities served, the article concludes that the creation of a single evaluation method may be an impossible task. To address this challenge, principles for effective programme evaluation are proposed with tools that can be tailored to the unique goals of specific sexual health organizations.


Culture, Health & Sexuality | 2015

'Women are supposed to be the leaders': intersections of gender, race and colonisation in HIV prevention with Indigenous young people.

Vanessa Oliver; Sarah Flicker; Jessica Yee Danforth; Erin Konsmo; Ciann Wilson; Randy Jackson; Jean-Paul Restoule; Tracey Prentice; June Larkin; Claudia Mitchell

Focusing on gender, race and colonialism, this paper foregrounds the voices of Indigenous young people, their histories of oppression, their legacies of resistance and the continuing strengths rooted in Indigenous peoples, their cultures and their communities. Exploring the relationship between gender and colonialism, the paper speaks to the lived realities of young people from Indigenous communities across Canada. Over 85 young people participated in six different Indigenous community workshops to create artistic pieces that explored the connections between HIV, individual risk and structural inequalities. In the course of the research, Indigenous young people, and young Indigenous women in particular, talked about how gender intersects with race and colonisation to create experiences that are, at times, especially difficult for them. In this paper, young people discuss the ways in which colonialism has demeaned womens roles and degraded womens sexuality, and how continuing cultural erasure and assimilationist policies impact on their lives and on their bodies.


Qualitative Health Research | 2018

Body Mapping as a Youth Sexual Health Intervention and Data Collection Tool

Candice Lys; Dionne Gesink; Carol Strike; June Larkin

In this article, we describe and evaluate body mapping as (a) an arts-based activity within Fostering Open eXpression Among Youth (FOXY), an educational intervention targeting Northwest Territories (NWT) youth, and (b) a research data collection tool. Data included individual interviews with 41 female participants (aged 13–17 years) who attended FOXY body mapping workshops in six communities in 2013, field notes taken by the researcher during the workshops and interviews, and written reflections from seven FOXY facilitators on the body mapping process (from 2013 to 2016). Thematic analysis explored the utility of body mapping using a developmental evaluation methodology. The results show body mapping is an intervention tool that supports and encourages participant self-reflection, introspection, personal connectedness, and processing difficult emotions. Body mapping is also a data collection catalyst that enables trust and youth voice in research, reduces verbal communication barriers, and facilitates the collection of rich data regarding personal experiences.


Canadian Journal of Public Health-revue Canadienne De Sante Publique | 2007

HIV Risk, Systemic Inequities, and Aboriginal Youth Widening the Circle for HIV Prevention Programming

June Larkin; Sarah Flicker; Ruth Koleszar-Green; Susan Mintz; Michelle Dagnino; Claudia Mitchell


Body Image | 2005

Beyond “healthy eating” and “healthy weights”: Harassment and the health curriculum in middle schools

June Larkin; Carla Rice


Eating Disorders | 1996

Slipping through the cracks: Sexual harassment, eating problems, and the problem of embodiment

June Larkin; Carla Rice; Vanessa Russell


Canadian Woman Studies | 2001

Gender youth and HIV risk.

Nikki Kumar; June Larkin; Claudia Mitchell


Archive | 2010

Service provider views on issues and needs for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender youth

Robb Travers; Adrian Guta; Sarah Flicker; June Larkin; Emily van der Meulen; Dalla Lana

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Vanessa Oliver

Wilfrid Laurier University

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Ciann Wilson

Wilfrid Laurier University

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Robb Travers

Wilfrid Laurier University

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