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Informationen zum Autor Laura Reichenbach is Social Scientist and Head of the Reproductive Health Programme at ICDDR,B in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Mindy Jane Roseman is Academic Director of the Human Rights Program and teaches law at Harvard Law School. Klappentext "Reproductive Health and Human Rights" assesses the past fifteen years of international efforts aimed at improving health, alleviating poverty, diminishing gender inequality, and promoting human rights. Zusammenfassung Reproductive Health and Human Rights assesses the past fifteen years of international efforts aimed at improving health! alleviating poverty! diminishing gender inequality! and promoting human rights. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface PART I: GLOBAL AGENDAS AND POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVES 1. Global Reproductive Health and Rights: Reflecting on ICPD —Mindy Jane Roseman and Laura Reichenbach 2. The Global Reproductive Health and Rights Agenda: Opportunities and Challenges for the Future —Laura Reichenbach 3. The Conundrum of Population and Reproductive Health Programs in the Early Twenty-First Century —George Zeidenstein 4. Population, Poverty Reduction, and the Cairo Agenda —David E. Bloom and David Canning 5. Mobilizing Resources for Reproductive Health —Tom W. Merrick 6. Measuring Reproductive Health: From Contraceptive Prevalence to Human Development Indicators —Joan Kaufman PART II: HUMAN RIGHTS REALIZATIONS 7. Bearing Human Rights: Maternal Health and the Promise of ICPD —Mindy Jane Roseman 8. Advocacy Strategies for Young People's Sexual and Reproductive Health: Using UN Processes —Bonnie Shepard 9. Approaches to Sexual and Reproductive Health and HIV Policies and Programs: Synergies and Disconnects —Sofia Gruskin 10. Technology, Reproductive Health, and the Cairo Consensus —Kelly Blanchard 11. The Cairo "Compromise" on Abortion and Its Consequences for Making Abortion Safe and Legal —Marge Berer PART III: CHALLENGES TO INSTITUTIONALIZING REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH AND RIGHTS 12. Advocacy for Sexuality and Women's Rights: Continuities, Discontinuities, and Strategies Since ICPD —Françoise Girard 13. Situating Reproductive Health Within the Academy —Alaka Basu 14. The Political Limits of the United Nations in Advancing Reproductive Health and Rights —Heidi Larson and Michael R. Reich 15. Examining Religion and Reproductive Health: Constructive Engagement for the Future —Frances Kissling 16. Conclusion: Conceptual Successes and Operational Challenges to ICPD: Global Reproductive Health and Rights Moving Forward —Rebecca Firestone, Laura Reichenbach, and Mindy Jane Roseman Notes Bibliography List of Contributors Index Acknowledgments ...