 
  Gender norms play a highly significant role in influencing sexual and reproductive health (SRH). They influence expected behaviour related to relationship formation and sexual activity. They also influence social expectations about whether and when young people should start to engage in sexual activity, and the nature of that activity.
Gendered social norms affect decision-making about family planning, desired family size, child spacing and abortion. They also affect whether women and girls access SRH services and can influence the quality of care different groups receive. Gender norms that expect greater passivity on the part of women and girls can increase their vulnerability to sexually transmitted infections and to gender-based violence in heterosexual relationships. Prevailing norms of femininity and masculinity can also affect the health and wellbeing of sexual and gender minorities.
A growing number of initiatives are attempting to shift discriminatory and harmful gender norms around SRH issues. The resources on this page highlight both the ways that gender norms affect SRH and evidence of approaches that have – and have not – worked well in changing these norms.
Featured SRH research from ALIGN
Biblio/Lit. review
13 May 2019
 
  Biblio/Lit. review
16 November 2018
 
        Diagram/Infographic
15 November 2018
 
  Report
14 April 2025
 
        Report
26 March 2025
 
        Report
13 November 2024
 
        Blog
8 January 2024
 
  Blog
23 August 2023
 
  Toolkit
13 July 2023
 
   
  ALIGN guide to gender norms and health
Read ALIGN's guide to gender norms and health including more about sexual and reproductive health.
SRH content from the ALIGN community
Report
26 November 2020
 
        Book/Book chapter
25 September 2023
 
        Case study
15 September 2023
 
        Blog
18 July 2023
 
  Video/podcast
16 July 2023
 
  Journal article
1 July 2023
