The article traces the emergence of reproductive rights principles in the UN during the 1960s–70s. Family planning programmes were the key discursive terrain on which conflicts over fertility, global population, and women's roles in ‘third world development’ were interlinked. The UN’s Commission on the Status of Women was a key actor: in the late 1960s it defined family planning in relation to a broadened definition of human rights, and repositioned it as a women’s rights issue. This shift resulted from competing but in some respects converging concepts of women’s rights among Western-based, communist-aligned and Global South-based women’s organisations at the Commission. While subsequent UN conferences, specifically Bucharest 1974 and Mexi...
Sexual and reproductive health and rights have increasingly been recognized in the international are...
The history of government racism is part of the explanation of the limited contemporary use of human...
After the end of World War II, American fears of growing populations in the developing world led to ...
The definition for reproductive rights was laid out in the 1994 International Conference on Populati...
Voluntary family planning is a key mainstay of demographic work and population policies. The 1994 In...
Family planning is re-emerging as a foremost contemporary global reproductive health issue largely o...
The challenge of including a gender perspective within human rights work has been a project only rec...
The 1994 Cairo Population Conference established a consensus that governmental population policies m...
The issue of women's reproductive rights has become an international concern in the recent decade. O...
Since this country’s founding, women of color have had little control over their reproductive freedo...
This Article first provides a historical account of the social and political context of the PRC\u27s...
This report, written in anticipation of history's largest gathering of world leaders, will focus in ...
Reproductive rights are an under-theorised aspect of the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda, mos...
This article examines legal challenges to women’s reproductive rights in Ireland and the Unite...
When the General Assembly adopted the Millennium Declaration in 2000 and, a year later, the Millenni...
Sexual and reproductive health and rights have increasingly been recognized in the international are...
The history of government racism is part of the explanation of the limited contemporary use of human...
After the end of World War II, American fears of growing populations in the developing world led to ...
The definition for reproductive rights was laid out in the 1994 International Conference on Populati...
Voluntary family planning is a key mainstay of demographic work and population policies. The 1994 In...
Family planning is re-emerging as a foremost contemporary global reproductive health issue largely o...
The challenge of including a gender perspective within human rights work has been a project only rec...
The 1994 Cairo Population Conference established a consensus that governmental population policies m...
The issue of women's reproductive rights has become an international concern in the recent decade. O...
Since this country’s founding, women of color have had little control over their reproductive freedo...
This Article first provides a historical account of the social and political context of the PRC\u27s...
This report, written in anticipation of history's largest gathering of world leaders, will focus in ...
Reproductive rights are an under-theorised aspect of the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda, mos...
This article examines legal challenges to women’s reproductive rights in Ireland and the Unite...
When the General Assembly adopted the Millennium Declaration in 2000 and, a year later, the Millenni...
Sexual and reproductive health and rights have increasingly been recognized in the international are...
The history of government racism is part of the explanation of the limited contemporary use of human...
After the end of World War II, American fears of growing populations in the developing world led to ...