Objectives: Since the 1994 Cairo conference on Population and Development, the liberty of women and couples to decide freely on the number and timing of their children is widely recognised as a human right. One of the consequences of this consensus, the necessity to provide universal access to modern family planning methods, has however proven difficult to realise. Despite the obvious beneficial impacts of generalised access to family planning services on maternal and child health, as well as on the economic, social and psychological well-being of individuals and communities, the number of women who don't have access to FP today is still estimated at 222,000. In some countries, the percentage of women who are willing to delay or avoid pregn...
This brief summarizes evidence on the benefits of family planning for girls and women, their childre...
The equation seems fairly simple: The more the world's population rises, the greater the strain...
Family planning is re-emerging as a foremost contemporary global reproductive health issue largely o...
Objectives: Since the 1994 Cairo conference on Population and Development, the liberty of women and ...
In 1994, the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) held in Cairo, Egypt, lai...
Human consumption is depleting the Earth\u27s natural resources and impairing the capacity of life-s...
IN THIS ISSUE: Accessing long-acting reversible contraception | Expanding access: Public–private par...
As climate change persists full bore, economists continue to estimate the cost effectiveness of vari...
The global community came together in July 2012 in pursuit of an ambitious yet essential goal: ensur...
With the looming problem of overpopulation, family planning has been identified as a cost-effective ...
Abstract In the past 50 years global population grew by 3.7 billion. There is a large unmet need for...
Voluntary high-quality family planning programs reduce poverty and improve women’s and children’s he...
The 1994 International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo was a watershed moment in t...
The links between rapid population growth and concerns regarding climate change have received little...
The IUSSP Scientific Panel on Reproductive Health, in collaboration with STEP UP and AFIDEP, held a ...
This brief summarizes evidence on the benefits of family planning for girls and women, their childre...
The equation seems fairly simple: The more the world's population rises, the greater the strain...
Family planning is re-emerging as a foremost contemporary global reproductive health issue largely o...
Objectives: Since the 1994 Cairo conference on Population and Development, the liberty of women and ...
In 1994, the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) held in Cairo, Egypt, lai...
Human consumption is depleting the Earth\u27s natural resources and impairing the capacity of life-s...
IN THIS ISSUE: Accessing long-acting reversible contraception | Expanding access: Public–private par...
As climate change persists full bore, economists continue to estimate the cost effectiveness of vari...
The global community came together in July 2012 in pursuit of an ambitious yet essential goal: ensur...
With the looming problem of overpopulation, family planning has been identified as a cost-effective ...
Abstract In the past 50 years global population grew by 3.7 billion. There is a large unmet need for...
Voluntary high-quality family planning programs reduce poverty and improve women’s and children’s he...
The 1994 International Conference on Population and Development in Cairo was a watershed moment in t...
The links between rapid population growth and concerns regarding climate change have received little...
The IUSSP Scientific Panel on Reproductive Health, in collaboration with STEP UP and AFIDEP, held a ...
This brief summarizes evidence on the benefits of family planning for girls and women, their childre...
The equation seems fairly simple: The more the world's population rises, the greater the strain...
Family planning is re-emerging as a foremost contemporary global reproductive health issue largely o...