This article addresses India’s contemporary population control policies and practices as a form of gendered violence perpetrated by the state and transnational actors, arguing that the targeting of poor, Adivasi and Dalit women for coercive mass sterilizations and unsafe injectable and implantable contraceptives is made possible by the long-term construction of particular women’s lives as devalued and disposable, and of their bodies as excessively fertile and therefore inimical to development and progress. It further considers how population policy is currently embedded in the neoliberal framework of development being pursued by the Indian state. In particular, it argues that the violence of population policies is being deepened as a result...
This article investigates reproductive work in the Global South which thrives on the commodification...
Open-access edition: DOI 10.6069/9780295748856Beginning in the late nineteenth century, India played...
India has the largest number of sterilized women in the world; as of 2005-06, two thirds of Indian w...
This article addresses India’s contemporary population control policies and practices as a form of g...
Contemporary population interventions by states, international organizations and corporates have dur...
This article explores sex selective abortion (SSA) as a form of structural violence within the broad...
Sterilisation in India (and globally) has a contentious and deeply politicised history. Despite this...
Female feticide--the selective abortion of female fetuses--is killing upwards of one million females...
Family planning programmes in India have historically been target-driven and incentive-based with st...
In this chapter, I trace the development of the reproductive services industry in India and situate ...
Since the 1990s, the global approach to family planning has undergone fundamental transformations fr...
This thesis examines the complex social, economic, and political climate that made the Indian Emerg...
In India, as in many developing countries, female sterilization is the main contraceptive method: 3...
The international population policy agenda has traditionally been dominated by demographically drive...
Female sterilization, or tubal ligation, is the most prevalent form of contraception in rural India....
This article investigates reproductive work in the Global South which thrives on the commodification...
Open-access edition: DOI 10.6069/9780295748856Beginning in the late nineteenth century, India played...
India has the largest number of sterilized women in the world; as of 2005-06, two thirds of Indian w...
This article addresses India’s contemporary population control policies and practices as a form of g...
Contemporary population interventions by states, international organizations and corporates have dur...
This article explores sex selective abortion (SSA) as a form of structural violence within the broad...
Sterilisation in India (and globally) has a contentious and deeply politicised history. Despite this...
Female feticide--the selective abortion of female fetuses--is killing upwards of one million females...
Family planning programmes in India have historically been target-driven and incentive-based with st...
In this chapter, I trace the development of the reproductive services industry in India and situate ...
Since the 1990s, the global approach to family planning has undergone fundamental transformations fr...
This thesis examines the complex social, economic, and political climate that made the Indian Emerg...
In India, as in many developing countries, female sterilization is the main contraceptive method: 3...
The international population policy agenda has traditionally been dominated by demographically drive...
Female sterilization, or tubal ligation, is the most prevalent form of contraception in rural India....
This article investigates reproductive work in the Global South which thrives on the commodification...
Open-access edition: DOI 10.6069/9780295748856Beginning in the late nineteenth century, India played...
India has the largest number of sterilized women in the world; as of 2005-06, two thirds of Indian w...