#Women’s Human Rights

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Impending Change for China’s One-Child Policy?
August 6, 2013 4 min. read

Recent media excitedly report on the People’s Republic of China’s (PRC) contemplation of abandoning its decades-old “one-child policy.” However, the official press agency, Xinhua, merely wrote that the PRC is still “deliberating” on studies and whether to “relax” the policy or not. Xinhua reported the spokesman for the National Family Planning Commission as maintaining that […]

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The Stupak Amendment: Entrenching Barriers to Women's Health Care and Institutionalizing Inequality
November 13, 2009 4 min. read

At almost the same time that the World Health Organization (WHO) released a report lamenting the many barriers that women face to accessing health care, the United States Congress threw up another such barrier in the form of the Stupak amendment blocking access to abortion.  Fittingly, the WHO report noted that “The obstacles that stand […]

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Live From New York: UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food Engages in Interactive Dialogue with the UN General Assembly
October 22, 2009 4 min. read

Yesterday I had the opportunity to attend the UN Special Rapporteur on the right to food’s, Prof. Olivier De Schutter’s, second presentation to the UN General Assembly.  The interactive dialogue that followed Prof. De Schutter’s presentation is an excellent example of how the Special Procedures system of the UN Human Rights Council allows for greater […]

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Senator Al Franken's Anti-Rape Amendment Closes Government-Corporate Loophole
October 16, 2009 3 min. read

  In a strange legal loophole, American companies—including those that receive government contracts such as Halliburton—can require their employees to sign contracts waiving their right to bring a civil trial against fellow employees that rape or otherwise sexually assault them. This egregious loophole was first spotlighted when Jamie Leigh Jones, a former contractor for one-time […]

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Yaz Birth Control Controversy: Pharmaceutical Profits, Unnecessary Risks, and the Gendered Distribution of Family Planning
September 27, 2009 8 min. read

  The current Yaz birth control controversy illustrates the continued tension between what pharmaceutical companies and the doctors that they pay claim is safe for consumption, and contrary scientific evidence. Natasha Singer of the New York Times is reporting that Yaz, a birth control pill manufactured and marketed by Bayer, is under fire as an […]

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U.N. Secretary General Calls Attention to the Plight of the World's Working Poor
September 18, 2009 3 min. read

As the United Nations headquarters in New York prepares to host what is being hailed as the largest General Assembly gathering to date, Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is disseminating a report designed to call attention to the plight of the world’s working poor.  Mr. Ban prepared a report entitled “Voices of the Vulnerable,” and today […]

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Finally, Health Care for All? U.S. Unveils a New Plan That Could Change the Rules About Pre-Existing Conditions
September 16, 2009 6 min. read

Today, after a much-anticipated wait, U.S. Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus laid out a health care reform plan. One of the key features of this plan is that it would prohibit private insurance companies from denying insurance to people because of preexisting conditions that they may have, and from discriminating against them because of […]

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Law-Breaking Trousers in Sudan: Lubna Hussein's Fight Against a Vague, Discriminatory "Indecency" Law
September 10, 2009 5 min. read

Governments and religions around the world remain intensely interested in what women, but not so much what men, are wearing in public. On September 6, 2009 I wrote about the proposed parliamentary ban on the public wearing of the niqab in France. On September 8, media outlets lit up with discussions of the recent trial […]

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France to Ban Burqas, Niqabs? What is at Stake–Rights to Religion, Rights to Gender Equality, and the Rights of a State to Remain Politically and Religiously "Neutral"
September 7, 2009 7 min. read

France’s center-right and left political parties are coalescing around a controversial issue: the idea of a national, parliamentary ban on the niqab.  Proponents of the ban cite the threat of Islamism to France’s position as a secular state, and argue further that the niqab is both a symbol of and an act of the oppression of […]

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Guatemala's Children Continue to Starve, Despite Right to Food Laws
August 29, 2009 3 min. read

Guatemala can be considered a vanguard country in ensuring the right to food, in that it has developed legal and institutional protections designed to protect and promote this right. Several national laws exist to promote and ensure the right to food, such as the law (SINESAN) to operationalize the national food security and nutrition plan […]

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A Tale of Two Afghanistans
August 23, 2009 4 min. read

It appears that for now, while some improvements are being made, women are still fighting for the hearts and minds of the Afghan people.

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More Than Just a Random Tragedy—Pennsylvania Shooting was a Gender Motivated Hate Crime and Congress Should Ensure Updates to Federal Hate Crime Legislation
August 12, 2009 6 min. read

The August 4 mass shooting of a women’s dance class in Collier, Pennsylvania, in which three women were killed and six others wounded, should be considered a bias motivated hate crime and should reinvigorate our work to end gender based violence. There is a tendency when hearing a story like this one—in which 48 year […]

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