CIIS Human Sexuality Department

CIIS Human Sexuality Department Check out our Masters of Science in sex counseling, SexTech, & public health analysis. Find out more at www.ciis.edu/hsx

Join our faculty for monthly Zoom info sessions & find out more here www.ciis.edu/hsx Admissions Requirements
All applicants must have a master’s degree from an accredited university. Overview
The PhD in Human Sexuality offers coursework in critical sexuality studies. This hybrid program offers online coursework plus three weekends of instruction per semester in San Francisco, CA. Select courses i

ntegrate AASECT core knowledge areas to allow the pursuit of AASECT certification in parallel with coursework.

✨ Student Spotlight: Courtney Johnson-BensonWe’re excited to share a new CIIS News feature highlighting doctoral student...
03/15/2026

✨ Student Spotlight: Courtney Johnson-Benson

We’re excited to share a new CIIS News feature highlighting doctoral student Courtney Johnson-Benson and her journey in the Human Sexuality Ph.D. program.

In the article, Courtney reflects on how the program’s intersectional, anti-racist, and interdisciplinary approach has shaped her advocacy work, scholarship, and future career path. She also shares about the powerful sense of community among students and how the program has expanded her vision for what she can contribute to the field of s*xuality studies.

“What I’m learning here is truly informing what I’m doing and putting into practice within my community.”

We’re so proud to see Courtney’s work and voice featured!

📖 Read the full story:
https://www.ciis.edu/news/finding-herself-in-the-work-a-journey-in-s*xuality-studies

Doctoral student Courtney Johnson-Benson explains why she chose CIIS' Human Sexuality Studies program and how it's reshaping her work as a community advocate.

12/26/2025

How do we get better at discussing s*xual satisfaction when our ge****ls are synonymous with the word ‘unmentionables’? It takes no luck, no money and can be learned

Are you looking for a meaningful gift this holiday season? Edited by Dr. Michele Marzullo, Chair and Professor in the De...
12/03/2025

Are you looking for a meaningful gift this holiday season? Edited by Dr. Michele Marzullo, Chair and Professor in the Department of Human Sexuality at CIIS, and Dr. William Leap, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Anthropology at American University and founder of the Lavender Languages Institute at CIIS, Critical Sexuality Studies, Lavender Languages, and Everyday Life is built from presentations at the 27th annual Lavender Languages Conference to provide a cross-section of lavender language research interests, with comments in each essay showing how each discussion addresses themes in Critical Sexuality Studies.

Critical Sexuality Studies and Lavender Languages and Linguistics are leading modes of inquiry in two different fields of s*xuality studies. The ways that these modes articulate each other are joined for the first time in this volume to explore language use related to s*xuality, gender, authority, and power in daily life.

“A triumphant volume that will leave you pondering new questions, reconsidering the political fabric of our language, and feeling immensely hopefully for the future of q***r and s*xuality scholarship. If this is the future of critical s*xuality studies, count me in!” - Breanne Fahs, Arizona State University

Pick up your copy today: https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/critical-s*xuality-studies-lavender-languages-and-everyday-life-9781350359956/

12/01/2025

In 2008, Katie Hinde stood in a California primate lab staring at hundreds of milk samples. Male babies got richer milk. Females got more volume. Science had missed half the conversation.
She was a postdoctoral researcher at the California National Primate Research Center, analyzing milk from rhesus macaque mothers. For months, she'd been measuring fat content, protein levels, mineral concentrations. The data showed something she hadn't expected: monkey mothers were producing completely different milk depending on whether they'd given birth to sons or daughters.
Sons received milk with higher concentrations of fat and protein—more energy per ounce. Daughters received more milk overall, with higher calcium levels. The biological recipe wasn't universal. It was customized.
Hinde ran the numbers again. The pattern held across dozens of mother-infant pairs. This wasn't random variation. This was systematic.
She thought about what she'd been taught in graduate school. Milk was nutrition. Calories, proteins, fats. A delivery system for energy. But if milk was just fuel, why would it differ based on the baby's s*x? Why would mothers unconsciously adjust the formula?
The answer shifted everything: milk wasn't passive. It was a message.
Hinde had arrived at this question through an unusual path. She'd earned her bachelor's degree in anthropology from the University of Washington, then completed her PhD at UCLA in 2008. While most lactation research focused on dairy cattle or developing infant formulas, Hinde wanted to understand what milk actually did in primate mothers and babies.
At UC Davis, she had access to the largest primate research center in the United States. She could collect milk samples at different stages of lactation, track infant development, measure maternal characteristics. She could ask questions that had never been systematically studied.
Like: why do young mothers produce milk with more stress hormones?
Hinde discovered that first-time monkey mothers produced milk with fewer calories but higher concentrations of cortisol than experienced mothers. Babies who consumed this high-cortisol milk grew faster but were more nervous and less confident. The milk wasn't just feeding the baby's body—it was programming the baby's temperament.
Or: how does milk respond when babies get sick?
Working with researchers who studied infant illness, Hinde found that when babies developed infections, their mothers' milk changed within hours. The white blood cell count in the milk increased dramatically—from around 2,000 cells per milliliter to over 5,000 during acute illness. Macrophage counts quadrupled. The levels returned to normal once the baby recovered.
The mechanism was remarkable: when a baby nurses, small amounts of the baby's saliva travel back through the ni**le into the mother's breast tissue. That saliva contains information about the baby's immune status. If the baby is fighting an infection, the mother's body detects the antigens and begins producing specific antibodies, which then flow back to the baby through the milk.
It was a dialogue. The baby's body communicated its needs. The mother's body responded.
Hinde started documenting everything. She collected milk from over 250 rhesus macaque mothers across more than 700 sampling events. She measured cortisol, adiponectin, epidermal growth factor, transforming growth factors. She tracked which babies gained weight faster, which were more exploratory, which were more cautious.
She realized she was mapping a language that had been invisible.
In 2011, Hinde joined Harvard as an assistant professor. She began writing about her findings, but she also noticed something troubling: almost nobody was studying human breast milk with the same rigor applied to other biological systems. When she searched publication databases, she found twice as many studies on erectile dysfunction as on breast milk composition.
The world's first food—the substance that had nourished every human who ever lived—was scientifically neglected.
She started a blog: "Mammals Suck...Milk!" The title was deliberately provocative. Within a year, it had over a million views. Parents, clinicians, researchers started asking questions. What bioactive compounds are in human milk? How does milk from mothers of premature babies differ from milk produced for full-term infants? Can we use this knowledge to improve formulas or help babies in NICUs?
Hinde's research expanded. She studied how milk changes across the day (fat concentration peaks mid-morning). She investigated how foremilk differs from hindmilk (babies with bigger appetites who nurse longer get higher-fat milk at the end of feeding). She examined how maternal characteristics—age, parity, health status, social rank—shaped milk composition.
In 2013, she created March Mammal Madness, a science outreach event that became an annual tradition in hundreds of classrooms. In 2014, she co-authored "Building Babies." In 2016, she received the Ehrlich-Koldovsky Early Career Award from the International Society for Research in Human Milk and Lactation for making outstanding contributions to the field.
By 2017, when she delivered her TED talk, she could articulate what she'd discovered across a decade of research: breast milk is food, medicine, and signal. It builds the baby's body and fuels the baby's behavior. It carries bacteria that colonize the infant gut, hormones that influence metabolism, oligosaccharides that feed beneficial microbes, immune factors that protect against pathogens.
More than 200 varieties of oligosaccharides alone. The baby can't even digest them—they exist to nourish the right community of gut bacteria, preventing harmful pathogens from establishing.
The composition is as unique as a fingerprint. No two mothers produce identical milk. No two babies receive identical nutrition.
In 2020, Hinde appeared in the Netflix docuseries "Babies," explaining her findings to a mass audience. She'd moved to Arizona State University, where she now directs the Comparative Lactation Lab. Her research continues to reveal new dimensions of how milk shapes infant outcomes from the first hours of life through childhood.
She works on precision medicine applications—using knowledge of milk bioactives to help the most fragile infants in neonatal intensive care units. She consults on formula development, helping companies create products that better replicate the functional properties of human milk for mothers who face obstacles to breastfeeding.
The implications extend beyond individual families. Understanding milk informs public health policy, workplace lactation support, clinical recommendations. It reveals how maternal characteristics, environmental conditions, and infant needs interact in real time through a biological messaging system that's been evolving for 200 million years—longer than dinosaurs.
Katie Hinde didn't just study milk. She revealed that the most ancient form of nourishment was also the most sophisticated. What science had treated as simple nutrition was actually a dynamic, responsive communication between two bodies—a conversation that shapes human development one feeding at a time.

Loraine Hutchins died this week. She was a trailblazer and contributed to bis*xual visibility and acceptance through her...
11/25/2025

Loraine Hutchins died this week. She was a trailblazer and contributed to bis*xual visibility and acceptance through her writings and activism. Among her many accomplishments, Hutchins was the co-editor of the anthology "Bi Any Other Name: Bis*xual People Speak Out." It was one of the first three bi anthologies in the world and was named one of Lambda Book Report’s Top 100 Q***r Books of the 20th Century.

Loraine Hutchins recently served as dissertation chair for one of our recent graduates, Andrés Cordero. She will be deeply missed. Rest In Power!

Congratulations to Dr. Clarissa Francis, an alum of ours, on her recent publication: "Black Women’s Bodily Autonomy, Sex...
11/18/2025

Congratulations to Dr. Clarissa Francis, an alum of ours, on her recent publication: "Black Women’s Bodily Autonomy, Sexual Freedom, and Pleasure."

Here's just one review: “A leading voice of the Real Hot Girl Movement, Dr. Clarissa E. Francis, a.k.a. The Real Hot Girl Doc, resolutely reflects on her journey for s*xual liberation and empowerment. Her journey offers a shared experience that resonates with Black women in a generation needing healing. As an expert guide, her perspicacious observations take us from a historicized pained Black female body to a s*xually liberated pleasured Black female body, where self-care, pleasure activism, and s*xual healing are valued and not shamed. Her trailblazing advocacy and intellectual thought on pleasure activism is some “real hot girl sh*t!” and a must-read.”
Ramona j.j. Bell, PhD, Chair and professor of critical race of gender & s*xuality studies, Cal Poly Humboldt

We hope you'll pick up a copy of your own today! https://www.amazon.com/Autonomy-Pleasure-Conversations-Sexualities-Identities/dp/1032699450

Are you following us on Instagram yet? Head on over to our new page: @ ciis_hsx to stay up to date with the department.
11/11/2025

Are you following us on Instagram yet? Head on over to our new page: @ ciis_hsx to stay up to date with the department.

What is s*xual wellness, really? ⬇️⬇️💜 Sexual Wellness does not equal just s*x. It’s about connection, consent, agency, ...
11/11/2025

What is s*xual wellness, really? ⬇️⬇️
💜 Sexual Wellness does not equal just s*x. It’s about connection, consent, agency, and wholeness. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), s*xual wellness is “a state of physical, emotional, mental, and social well-being in relation to s*xuality.”

It’s not merely the absence of dysfunction—it’s the presence of pleasure, respect, and safety.

Core Components of Sexual Wellness are:
💜 Knowledge & Education: Understanding your body, boundaries, and choices.
💜 Consent & Communication: Mutual respect as the foundation of all intimacy.
💜 Equity & Access: Everyone deserves inclusive s*xual healthcare and representation.
💜 Pleasure & Joy : Healthy s*xuality includes pleasure as part of overall well-being.

Research shows that when people have access to inclusive, comprehensive s*xual education and care, they report:
💓 Higher self-esteem
💓 Healthier relationships
💓 Lower rates of STIs and s*xual violence
💓 Greater life satisfaction

Sexual wellness belongs to everyone—across gender identities, orientations, abilities, and cultures. When we honor s*xuality as part of our humanity, we cultivate both personal healing and collective liberation. What does s*xual wellness mean to you? ⬇️⬇️

🔥 Interested in learning more about our Masters of Science in critical s*xuality studies or our PhD in human s*xuality? ...
10/25/2025

🔥 Interested in learning more about our Masters of Science in critical s*xuality studies or our PhD in human s*xuality? Please join faculty and current students today at our university Fall open house happening at 10 AM Pacific/1 PM eastern time. Sign up here: https://www.ciis.edu/events/fall-open-house ❤️

09/12/2025

The birth control pills, IUDs and hormonal implants were purchased by U.S.A.I.D. for women in low-income countries. They had been in limbo in a Belgian warehouse after the U.S. cut much of its foreign aid.

09/06/2025

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