Author:
Gilby Lynda,Koivusalo Meri,Atkins Salla
Abstract
IntroductionThe initial International Conference on Population and Development in 1994 contains the first reference to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights (SRHR). It has been considered agreed language on SRHR in future United Nations (UN) documents. However, opposition to SRHR in global forums has increased, including in conjunction with an increase in religious, far-right populist politics. This study provides an empirical analysis of UN documents to discover whether opposition to SRHR has resulted in changes in the language on SRHR between and what these changes are.MethodsThis is a qualitative policy analysis in which 14 UN resolutions, 6 outcome documents from the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) and 522 country and group statements and 5 outcome reports from the Commission on Population and Development were collected from the organisations websites from 2014 to 2019. Framework analysis was used. The text from documents was charted and indexed and themes developed from these.ResultsThe results demonstrated a disappearance of the language on abortion in the CSW outcome documents from 2017 and a change in the language on comprehensive sexuality education in the CSW as well as the UN General Assembly resolutions from 2018. This change included a removal of ‘sexuality’ to an increased emphasis on the role of families. Furthermore, documents showed an inability of some states to accept any mention of sexual and reproductive health at all, expanding from the usual contestations over abortion.ConclusionOur findings suggest that the global shift in politics and anti-SRHR actors at UN negotiations and conferences have removed previously agreed on language on SRHR from future UN resolutions and outcome documents. This is a concern for the global realisation of SRHR.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy
Reference61 articles.
1. Eager P . Global population policy: from population control to reproductive rights. New York: Routledge, 2004.
2. Here to stay: the evolution of sexual and reproductive health and rights in international human rights law;Berro Pizzarossa;Laws,2018
3. Usa aid policy and induced abortion in sub-Saharan Africa: an analysis of the Mexico City policy;Brooks;Lancet Glob Health,2019
4. Power and Politics in International Funding for Reproductive Health: the US Global Gag Rule
5. Joachim JM , Setting A . The un, and NGOs gender violence and reproductive rights. Washington, D.C: Georgetown University Press, 2007.