2013-09-192013-09-192003http://hdl.handle.net/11212/176https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/6b00/e2d3ef797fbc4e0c6548d22a63c90a85c9f4.pdfAlthough there is increasing evidence of risky consensual sex among young people in developing countries, non-consensual sexual experiences among them have rarely been studied and few interventions have been designed to protect them from the risks of such experiences. However, what is available suggests that coercion and unwantedness may play a considerable role in the sexual relations of young people girls and young women but also boys and young men. The implications of non-consensual sexual experiences for young people s rights, their health and development and the risks they pose in the transition to adulthood are enormous. This review collates what is known about non-consensual sexual experiences of young people those aged 10 24 in developing countries, synthesises from this a profile of the magnitude and correlates of sexual coercion, and draws lessons for the implementation of appropriate programmes. Notwithstanding significant methodological limitations, the few available studies provide several common insights and have suggested that although definitions, study populations and study designs may differ, making comparison difficult, nonconsensual sex is indeed experienced by disturbing proportions of young people in all settings from which data were drawnpdfChild sexual exploitationExploitation -- traffickingAsiaInternational ResourcesNon consensual sexual experiences of young people: A review of evidence from developing countriesText