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Access to safe abortion: an essential strategy for achieving the Millennium Development Goals to improve maternal health, promote gender equality and reduce poverty
Millennium Project, 2007International leaders should support reforms of national laws on abortion in line with the commitments made at the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) in 1994, and with the fifth Millennium Development Goal (MDG) to reduce maternal mortality (the World Health Organization estimates that 13 percent of all maternal deaths globally are caused by unsafe abortion).DocumentBRIDGE Bibliography 18: Women and girls living with HIV/AIDS: overview and annotated bibliography
BRIDGE, 2007HIV/AIDS is both driven by and entrenches gender inequality, leaving women more vulnerable than men to its impact. This report - consisting of an overview, annotated bibliography, and contacts section - considers the specific challenges faced by women and girls who are living with HIV and AIDS.DocumentSexual and Reproductive Health for HIV-Positive Women and Adolescent Girls: Manual for Trainers and Programme Managers
2006Sexual and reproductive rights apply to all individuals regardless of HIV status. Yet more often than not, the rights of HIV positive women and adolescent girls are not recognised or given priority. Health workers need both training and support to eliminate stigma and discrimination towards women living with HIV and to provide quality safe and compassionate care to HIV positive women.DocumentAdvocacy Training by the International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS
2005The International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS joined forces with the POLICY project with the aim of developing an advocacy agenda on sexual and reproductive health rights, and access to care, treatment, and support for women living with HIV/AIDS in South Africa and Swaziland.Document"You Don't Belong Here": Fear, Blame and Shame Around HIV & AIDS, Report from the VSO-RAISA Regional Conference, Pretoria, South Africa, October 2005
Voluntary Services Overseas, 2005In October 2005, delegates from 10 countries gathered in Pretoria, South Africa, for a three-day VSO-RAISA regional conference on tackling the stigma and discrimination experienced by people living with HIV and AIDS. That men and women experience stigma differently was widely documented by the conference participants.DocumentHIV Positive Women and Human Rights, Vision Paper 4
2004Many countries have signed up to international human rights frameworks that oblige them to respect and protect the rights of all people regardless of HIV status and gender. Despite this, HIV positive women are often subject to degrading and discriminatory treatment, causing blame, isolation and shame, and leading to restricted freedom of choice.DocumentHIV Positive Young Women, ICW Vision Paper 1
2004A group of young HIV positive women from Eastern and Southern Africa met in 2004 to develop a common advocacy agenda. One of their major concerns was that young women living with HIV and AIDS are unable to access their sexual and reproductive rights, such as the right to have children, the right to safe abortion, and the right not to be forced into termination of pregnancy or sterilisation.DocumentGender and Sexuality: Supporting Resources Collection
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2007Mobilising around sexuality is not new. Activists and practitioners have long been working on issues such as HIV/AIDS; sexual violence; abortion; sex work; and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights. What is new is the integrated, affirmative approach to sexuality which is increasingly being adopted.DocumentChoices: A Guide for Young People
Macmillan Education Ltd, London and Oxford, 1999Choices' is written for young people growing up in Africa today and for peer educators, youth leaders, teachers, health workers, and parents. It provides accurate information on sexual and reproductive health, and outlines activities designed to explore values and attitudes in relation to culture and the changing world; and to build self-esteem.DocumentPosition statement: injecting drug users and access to HIV treatment
International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS, 2005In 2005, there were an estimated 13.2 million injecting drug users worldwide, 80% of whom live in developing and transitional countries.Pages
