By Our Watch
This report summarises the findings of a survey exploring young Australians' attitudes to gender, sex, relationships and pornography. It finds that early exposure to pornography can have a significant negative impact and that young people are accessing pornographic material earlier than previously reported. The report highlights measures governments can take to reduce the harmful impacts of pornography on children and young people.
The report argues that young people will continue to access all kinds of material, both in pornography and in other forms of media, to understand sex and relationships and so argues for a harm reduction approach, ensuring that young people and communities are equipped and supported to critically engage with this material.
Findings
The average age at which the participants have first seen porn was 13.6 years.
For young women, the average age is 2 years younger than it was in 2018.
31% of young people are watching porn as a form of sexual education.
25% of 16 to 17 year olds see porn as realistic.
73% of young people (65% of men and 80% of women) agree that porn is degrading to women.
Access to information and education about pornography has the potential to mediate the negative impacts of pornography on young people, their wellbeing and relationships.
Key recommendations
Integrate information on the topic of pornography in age-appropriate and sequential ways into respectful relationships education (RRE) across school sectors.
Work in partnership with experts and uses co-design processes with young people to develop information and practical resources specifically for young people on pornography.
Partner with research organisations to collect robust nationally representative data about young people’s pornography exposure and access, to inform ongoing work and responses.
Melbourne< Our Watch, 2024. 4p.