Donnelly study: Difference between revisions

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The '''Donnelly Study'''[http://cda.morris.umn.edu/~meeklesr/celibacy.html] is the first academic study to take the concept of involuntary celibacy seriously and has been cited dozens of times by academic literature, including peer-reviewed academic research. The study itself was also peer-reviewed and published in the The Journal of Sex Research(2001) . <ref>https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00224490109552083</ref>  
The '''Donnelly Study'''[http://cda.morris.umn.edu/~meeklesr/celibacy.html] is the first academic study to take the concept of involuntary celibacy seriously and has been cited dozens of times by academic literature, including peer-reviewed academic research. The study itself was also peer-reviewed and published in the The Journal of Sex Research<ref>https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00224490109552083</ref> (2001) .
This study was the beginning of the use of the word incel as an academic sociological term.  [[Alana|Alana's]] [[incel]] [[Alana's Involuntary Celibacy Project|mailing list]] was coordinating with a professor of sociology named, "[[Denise Donnelly]]", and a team of Georgia State University researchers to use her community as a beginning for research on the causes of involuntary celibacy in early 1999.  The study was co-authored by sociologist and professor Elizabeth Burgess who, as late as 2014, had described incel forums as "valuable."
This study was the beginning of the use of the word incel as an academic sociological term.  [[Alana|Alana's]] [[incel]] [[Alana's Involuntary Celibacy Project|mailing list]] was coordinating with a professor of sociology named, "[[Denise Donnelly]]", and a team of Georgia State University researchers to use her community as a beginning for research on the causes of involuntary celibacy in early 1999.  The study was co-authored by sociologist and professor Elizabeth Burgess who, as late as 2014, had described incel forums as "valuable."


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