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Summary Measures of attitudes toward homosexuality, sexual liberalism-conservatism, and sex guilt, previously given to Canadian and Brazilian samples, were administered to 69 male and 51 female West Indian college students. The West Indian males scored significantly more antihomosexual than the Canadians and significantly less so than the Brazilians. In all other respects the pattern of results was very similar in the three countries. Churchill's hypotheses relating cultural sex-negativism, sex-role stereotyping, and anti-homosexual prejudice were again supported. West Indian females scored less antihomosexual and less guilty about sex than the males. In all other respects the male and female results were very similar.
Brown et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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