Summary
Contents
Subject index
The decennial International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) that took place in Cairo in 1994 has been described as historic and revolutionary. It rejected top-down demographically driven population control programs, emphasizing instead reproductive health and rights for women, and for men. This volume explores the ideas and institutions that framed the Cairo consensus and traces their trajectories sixteen years down the line. Why were Third World feminists profoundly critical of the Cairo consensus and process? How has the health of people around the world been affected by neo-liberal economic policies? The intervening years have also seen the global rise of anti-feminisms and fundamentalisms targeting women's bodies and rights. What have these meant for women's rights, including reproductive rights?
The book presents detailed case studies ranging from India and China, to Egypt, Africa and Latin America, as well as overarching themed essays. With data, reasoned arguments and passion, all the chapters reveal the fault lines in thinking about population issues that do not challenge neo-Malthusian ideas. With the ongoing financial and climate crisis, such population ideas are once again coming onto centrestage, indicating the need for critical awareness.
This book contains essays by leading scholars across the world, brought together in one place for the first time. From the politics of abortion and immigration to rising levels of fundamentalist violence and sex selective abortions, the volume explores a range of issues from several vantage points. It offers startling new insights into these issues by linking them to neo-liberal economic policies that have profoundly shaped health globally.
China's Population Policies: Engendered Biopolitics, the One-Child Norm, and Masculinization of Child Sex Ratios
China's Population Policies: Engendered Biopolitics, the One-Child Norm, and Masculinization of Child Sex Ratios
State birth planning became a nationwide political and institutional reality in China in the 1970s. Since then, every pregnancy has been designated as either planned and legal (jihuanei shengyu) or unplanned and thus illegal (jihuawai shengyu). Since 1979/1980, birth planning has been virtually synonymous with the notorious one-child policy. Both popular media and scholarly literature have generally portrayed Chinese population politics as an unending and violent struggle between a coercive state and a fiercely resistant society that continues to this day (Aird 1990; Scharping 2003; White 2000; Zhou 1996). These accounts neglect three important features of the politics ...
- Loading...