The World Health Organization and leading global aid distributors have made access to contraception one of their number one priorities for global health intervention this century, citing the corresponding improvements in maternal and infant mortality rates, lowering of family size, and higher education levels in areas with recent access to birth control. Yet historically, the Catholic Church has condemned artificial contraception as antithetical to a Christian understanding of marriage, sexuality, and family and an ultimate danger to community life. This original qualitative study uses classical grounded theory techniques to investigate how Catholics and non-Catholics with experience in low-income countries navigate the social justice issue...
This article examines how economic analysis of the social consequences of the birth control pill dov...
The Roman Catholic bishops of the United States have publicly opposed artificial contraception since...
This study uses data from National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) to determine the effect of religio...
Objective: 'Low socioeconomic status' and 'religiousness' appear to have gained status as nearly uni...
The article by Monique and Jeffery Wubbenhorst asks the question—Should Evangelical Christian Organi...
Objective: 'Low socioeconomic status' and 'religiousness' appear to have gained status as nearly uni...
The thesis of this dissertation is that Catholic teaching on family planning can be strengthened by ...
This special issue uses Catholicism as a thread to bring together five contributions to the transnat...
This month marks the 50th anniversary of the landmark “Humanae Vitae,” Pope Paul VI’s strict prohibi...
<p>Uncontrolled birth spacing is associated with higher rates of maternal and neonatal morbidity and...
The Catholic countries of Europe pose a puzzle for economic demography – their fertility is the lowe...
With these words slamming the door on Catholics’use of modern contraceptives, Pope Paul VI cleaved t...
Dr. FitzGerald looks at the position in which social and environmental pressures, widespread contrac...
<p>Studies have shown that religion is an important cultural factor that may determine attitudes and...
This article examines how economic analysis of the social consequences of the birth control pill dov...
The Roman Catholic bishops of the United States have publicly opposed artificial contraception since...
This study uses data from National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) to determine the effect of religio...
Objective: 'Low socioeconomic status' and 'religiousness' appear to have gained status as nearly uni...
The article by Monique and Jeffery Wubbenhorst asks the question—Should Evangelical Christian Organi...
Objective: 'Low socioeconomic status' and 'religiousness' appear to have gained status as nearly uni...
The thesis of this dissertation is that Catholic teaching on family planning can be strengthened by ...
This special issue uses Catholicism as a thread to bring together five contributions to the transnat...
This month marks the 50th anniversary of the landmark “Humanae Vitae,” Pope Paul VI’s strict prohibi...
<p>Uncontrolled birth spacing is associated with higher rates of maternal and neonatal morbidity and...
The Catholic countries of Europe pose a puzzle for economic demography – their fertility is the lowe...
With these words slamming the door on Catholics’use of modern contraceptives, Pope Paul VI cleaved t...
Dr. FitzGerald looks at the position in which social and environmental pressures, widespread contrac...
<p>Studies have shown that religion is an important cultural factor that may determine attitudes and...
This article examines how economic analysis of the social consequences of the birth control pill dov...
The Roman Catholic bishops of the United States have publicly opposed artificial contraception since...
This study uses data from National Survey of Family Growth (NSFG) to determine the effect of religio...