Couples LGBTQ+ aux États-Unis : Nouvelles données et possibilités de recherche dans le cadre de l’étude nationale sur la santé des couples

le Lundi 30 Septembre 2024 à l’Ined de 11h30 à 12h30, en présentiel en salle Sauvy & en visioconférence via ZOOM

Couples LGBTQ+ aux États-Unis : Nouvelles données et possibilités de recherche dans le cadre de l’étude nationale sur la santé des couples

Intervenante : Claire Kamp Dush (professeure de sociologie et directrice de Development Core at the Minnesota Population Center - University of Minnesota Twin Cities) ; discutante : Marie Bergström (chercheuse Ined UR03 & UR04, co-responsable UR04)

The National Couples’ Health and Time Study (N =3,642) is a population-representative study of same and different-gender couples in the United States that includes large oversamples of sexual, gender, racial and ethnic diverse persons. Data were collected during the COVID-19 pandemic and includes survey, time diary, contextual, and biological data from respondents and their partners (N = 1515). We will describe the study and present key findings from recent NCHAT papers. Our focus will be on findings that are specific to LGBTQ+ populations including identity centrality, outness, measures of sexual orientation and gender, sources of support, discrimination experiences, social climate and structural heterosexism. All data presented are publicly available and we will review how to access the data as well.

Biographie de Claire Kamp Dush :

Claire Kamp Dush (she/her) is Professor of Sociology and director of the Development Core at the Minnesota Population Center at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities. She is a family demographer who studies intimate relationships and their intersection with human development. She is the principal investigator of two population health data collections funded by NICHD - the National Couples’ Health and Time Study (with Dr. Wendy Manning) and NIA - the third repeated cross-section of the Work and Family Life Study (with Dr. Miles Taylor). She is a member of the NIH CSR Social Sciences and Population Studies B study section.