Theo Sandfort
Theo Sandfort (in full, Theodorus G.M. Sandfort) is, since 2001, a research scientist at the HIV center for clinical and behavioral Studies, and is associate professor of clinical sociomedical sciences in psychiatry, Columbia University. Trained as a social psychologist, before joining the center, he was a tenured Associate Professor at the Department of Clinical Psychology at Utrecht University, the Netherlands, and later the Chairman of the Interfaculty Department of Lesbian and Gay Studies at Utrecht University. He was Director of the Research Program “Diversity, Lifestyles and Health”, at the Netherlands Institute of Social Sexological Research (NISSO). Dr. Sandfort is / was on the Editorial Board of several academic journals, including Archives of Sexual Behavior, Ken Plummer's Sexualities, and Paidika. He served as President of the the International Academy of Sex Research and the Dutch Society of Sexology and, in 2008, received the John Money Award from the Society of the Scientific Study of Sexuality for his research work.
Among MAPs, AAMs and their allies, Sandfort is known for his research on man/boy sexual relationships and early childhood sexuality.
Selected publications [in English]
- Sandfort, T. [Book]. The Sexual Aspects of Paedophile Relations: The Experiences of Twenty-Five Boys (1981).
- Sandfort, T. (1983). Pedophile relationships in the Netherlands: Alternative lifestyle for children?. J Fam Econ Iss 5, 164–183.[1]
- Sandfort, T. (1984). Sex in pedophilic relationships: An empirical investigation among a non-representative group of boys. Journal of Sex Research, 20(2), 123–142.
- Sandfort, T. [Book]. Boys on their contacts with men: A study of sexually expressed friendships, (New York: Global Academic Publishers, 1987).[2]
- Udell et al. (2010). The relationship between early sexual debut and psychosocial outcomes: A longitudinal study of Dutch adolescents, Archives of Sexual Behavior.
See also
References
- ↑ Sandfort, T. Pedophile relationships in the Netherlands: Alternative lifestyle for children?. J Fam Econ Iss 5, 164–183 (1983). <https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01091326>
- ↑ Discussion on MHAMic.