1. Ruling the Womb
- Author
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Beatriz Eugenia Cid Aguayo, Alejandra Brito Peña, and Carla Donoso Orellana
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Sociology and Political Science ,Human rights ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Public health ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Abortion ,Single mothers ,Politics ,Grassroots ,Family planning ,Law ,Reproductive rights ,medicine ,Sociology ,media_common - Abstract
In Chile, sexual and reproductive rights have been at the core of an ideological and material struggle during the past decade between the women’s movement—the grassroots, academic, and nongovernmental organizations that work for women’s rights, whether or not they call themselves feminists—and conservative forces. The 2006 election of Michelle Bachelet, a divorced socialist and single mother, as president led to governmental attempts to advance reproductive rights, principally distribution of the emergency contraceptive pill in public health care centers. This effort was unsuccessful for most of Bachelet’s term. Although in 2010 a new emergency contraception law finally allowed the public health system to distribute the “morning-after pill,” the political debate over other reproductive rights such as abortion is still dominated by conservative positions.En Chile, los derechos sexuales y reproductivos se han visto al centro de una lucha ideologica y material durante la decada pasada, una lucha entre el mov...
- Published
- 2012
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