Amy Schalet is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of Massachusetts
Amherst and a specialist on adolescent sexuality and culture in comparative perspective.
Her forthcoming book, Not Under My Roof: Parents, Teens, and the Culture of Sex
(University of Chicago Press), examines the regulation of adolescent sexuality in
American and Dutch families. Probing our child-rearing for what it tells us about our
culture, Not Under My Roof offers an unprecedented, intimate account of the different
ways that girls and boys in both countries negotiate sex, love, and growing up. Schalet
has worked closely with physicians and others on new approaches to sexual health
promotion for adolescents. She has served on the boards of national and local health
organizations, consulted with community groups and the media, and collaborated on
clinical and educational materials. Schalet has delivered plenary addresses and trainings
at the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine,
the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, the Michigan Departments of Public Health
and Education, the STD-prevention branch of the Centers for Disease Control, among many
others. She has written opinion pieces for the New York Times and the Washington Post,
and her research has been featured in such online publications as Slate and Salon.
Schalet has been awarded grants and fellowships from, among others, the Ford Foundation,
the National Science Foundation and the Woodrow Wilson Foundation. She holds a bachelor’s
degree from Harvard and a doctorate from the University of California, Berkeley. 

Selected Recent Publications

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Not Under My Roof: Parents, Teens and the Culture of Sex (2011)

For American parents, teenage sex is something to be feared and forbidden: most would never...

 

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‘I Wouldn't Be this Firm if I Didn't Care’: Preventive Clinical Counseling for Reproductive Health (with Jillian T. Henderson, Tina Raine, Maya Blum, and Cynthia C. Harper), Patient Education and Counseling (2011)

CONTEXT: This qualitative study of health care clinicians serving women at heightened risk of sexually...

 

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Abstinence and Teenagers: Prevention Counseling Practices of Health Care Providers Serving High-Risk Patients in the United States (with Cynthia C. Harper, Jillian T. Henderson, Davida Becker, and Tina R. Raine), Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health (2010)

CONTEXT: Abstinence-only education has had little demonstrable impact on teenagers' sexual behaviors, despite significant policy...

 

Popular Press

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The Sleepover Question, The New York Times (2011)