1.Sexuality, gender, health and rights: An introduction. Part I Pioneering beginnings. 2.The importance of being historical: Understanding the making of sexualities. 3.'Sex involves something you are, not just something you do': Mary Calderone and the fight for sexual health. 4.Anthropological foundations of sexuality, health and rights: 1920s-2020s. 5.Alfred C. Kinsey's legacy and the Kinsey Institute at Indiana University. 6.Sexuality and the turn to citizenship. 7.Making a sociology of gender and sexuality. Part II Diversity in practice - enacting, gender, sex and sexuality. 8.Two(Spirit)-Eyed Seeing: Honouring gender and sexual diversity for those Indigenous to Turtle Island. 9.Becoming hijra in Dhaka: Discourse, pleasure and identification. 10.The health and human rights of people with intersex variations. 11.Living under the shadow of the law: Sexual citizenship and belonging in Singapore and Australia. 12.Gender and sexuality identities in social media and everyday life: The expansion and redefinition of non-binary gender and bisexuality. 13.An unhappy marriage? Sex segregation and inclusion debates in women's sport. 14.'Cripping' intellectual disability and sexuality in media representations: Conundrums and possibilities. 15.Ritual, modernity and well-being: Queer spirit mediums and ritual healing in mainland Southeast Asia. Part III Communicating gender, sex and sexuality. 16.Beliefs about sexuality and gender in identity discourses online. 17.Automating vulnerability: Algorithms, artificial intelligence and machine learning for gender and sexual minorities. 18.Digital intimacy in China. 19.Queer women and digital platforms: Identity modulation for digital sexual citizenship, and beyond? 20.Playing with roles and representations: Challenging the stability of gender, sex and sexuality in video games. 21.Erotic representations of gender diversity: A computer-assisted linguistic analysis of online erotica. 22.Express yourself: Fashion, freedom and sexual politics in the 21st century. 23.Homosexuality and normality: The reception of gay male representations on film and television. Part IV The choreography of sex. 24.Ukuchindila Nabwinga: Bemba women, sexual dance and agency. 25.Sex in motion: Some sexual scenes in Brazil. 26.BDSM, intercorporeality and the feeling body. 27.Flirting, erotic interactions and sexual choreography among urban youth: Hip-Hop in New York City. 28.Ecosexuality: Art practices for queering the Earth, healing and recovering. 29.Livelihood, dancing, health, belonging; spaces to be and spaces to flourish. 30.The political economy of pleasure. Part V The darker side(s) of sex. 31.Intimate partner violence: Bringing about change through successful interventions. 32.Masculinity crisis? The nature and origins of sexual violence and corrective rape in South Africa. 33.Becoming teachable, staying in community: Engaged research on incest in Mexico, before and after COVID-19. 34.'I'd give him a blow job just to get out of there': Sexual citizenship and the social production of campus sexual assault. 35.Sexual violence in South African men's prisons: Causes, consequences and promising practices. Part VI Sexual well-being and health. 36.From sexology to sexual health and rights. 37.'Safe sex ain't for sissies!' (with apologies to Bette Davis). 38.Sexual health beyond the buzzword: The turn to social justice. 39.Innovation in HIV prevention technologies: The currents and eddies of progress within and across contexts. 40.Sex, drugs and biomedical prevention: Rethinking sexual health through PrEP research in Peru and HPV vaccine roll-out in Mexico. 41.Achieving trans pregnancy and parenthood: The impacts of cisnormativity on trans people's reproductive autonomy. 42.Poverty and erotic equity. Part VII Sexual rights and erotic justice. 43.Sexual rights: Ever-contested, but never more important. 44.Health and human rights inequities impacting sex workers globally. 45.Sex tech in an age of surveillance capitalism: Design, data and governance. 46.Justice through the erotic: Puta politics, knowledge and feminism as guides for how to move beyond binaries and destabilise contradictions. 47.Good sex liberates: Why sexual rights and erotic justice should get into bed with pleasure. 48.Dr Frankenstein's hydra: Contours, meanings and effects of anti-gender politics.