
Trading Women's Health and Rights
Description
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This book is aimed at an inter-disciplinary audience of economists, public health professionals, demographers, sociologists, anthropologists, and women's studies specialists. It will also be of interest to policymakers and representatives of civil society organizations working on health, economic justice, and employment issues.
Reviews / Votes
This excellent collection of papers that address concrete trade and health issues in specific countries within a conceptual framework that pretty much makes sense of it all...Trading Women's Health and Rights? sets out its premises at the outset and follows through with illuminating case studies, careful analysis, and a lot of information about trade agreements and their health consequences that are unlikely to be known to population specialists. To the editors and authors of what must have seemed at the outset a most formidable task, Salud! * Ruth Dixon-Mueller, Book reviews *More details
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Persons
Anju Malhotra is group director of social and economic development at the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW).
Elissa Braunstein is an assistant professor of Economics at Colorado State University in Fort Collins.
Content
Introduction
Reproductive Health, Trade Liberalization, and Development
Elissa Braunstein and Caren Grown
Part I: Conceptual Overviews: Direct and Indirect Linkages
1. Trade Liberalization and Reproductive Health: A Framework for Understanding the Linkages - Caren Grown
2. Implication of GATS for Reproductive Health Services - Debra Lipson
3.Women's Work, Autonomy and Reproductive Health: The Role of Trade and Investment Liberalization - Elissa Braunstein
Part II: Country Case Studies
4. Implications of Trade Liberalization for Working Women's Marriage: Case Studies of Bangladesh, Egypt and Vietnam - Sajeda Amin
5. Trade Liberalization, Women's Migration and Reproductive Health in China - Lin Tan, Zhenzhen Zheng, and Yueping Song
6. Women's Reproductive Health in Export Industries at National Borders - Catalina Denman
7. Runaway Knowledge: Trade Liberalization and Reproductive Practices among Sri Lanka's Garment Factory Workers - Sandya Hewamanne
Part III: Trade Liberalization and Government Capacity to Deliver Reproductive Health Supplies and Servies
8. I Would Pay if I Could Pay in Maize: Trade Liberalization, User Fees in Health and Women's Health Seeking in Tanzania - Priya Nanda
9. Tripping Up: AIDs, Pharmaceuticals and Intellectual Property in South Africa - Pranitha Maharaj and Benjamin Roberts
10. Midwifery and Nursing Migration: Implications of Trade Liberalization for Maternal Health in Low-Income Countries - Nancy Gerein and Andrew Green
Part IV: Policy and Advocacy
11. Trade Agreements and Reproductive Health and Rights: An Agenda for Analysis and Advocacy - Marceline White
12. Reproductive Health Advocacy - Alaka Malwade Basu
About the Contributors
Index
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