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  • Document

    Improving Access to Safe Abortion: Guidance on Making High Quality Services Available

    IPAS, 2005
    This CD-ROM aims to enhance public discussion of the issues around unsafe abortion and encourage the provision of safe abortion services to the extent allowed by national law. The package includes advocacy tools in English, Spanish, and Portuguese which can be used with a range of audiences - policy-makers, health care providers, the media, and individuals.
  • Document

    Choices: A Guide for Young People

    Macmillan Education Ltd, London and Oxford, 1999
    Choices' 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.
  • Document

    The Female Condom: a Guide for Planning and Programming

    Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS, 2000
    This guide shows how to integrate the female condom into already existing programmes and how to effectively promote the female condom and train providers to adequately educate potential users about it.
  • Document

    Pleasure and Prevention Case Study Number One

    The Pleasure Project, 2004
    Vida Positiva (Positive Living) is a training programme in Mozambique which aimed to promote safer sex among married couples by tackling one of the reasons that married men were having sex outside of their marriages: because they were bored with their sex lives at home.
  • Document

    Walking the Talk: Inner Spaces Outer Faces - a Gender and Sexuality Initiative

    CARE International, 2006
    Initiating a dialogue around sex and sexuality was identified as a priority need by CARE reproductive health programme staff working in India and Vietnam.
  • Document

    Sexuality Matters

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2006
    This Bulletin addresses a theme that mainstream development has persistently neglected: sexuality. Why is sexuality a development concern? Because sexuality matters to people, and is an important part of most people's lives. Because development policies and practices are already having a significant - and often negative - impact on sexuality.
  • Document

    Stockholm Call to Action: Investing in Reproductive Health and Rights as a Development Priority

    United Nations Population Fund, 2005
    The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the Government of Sweden convened the high-level roundtable, ?Reducing Poverty and Achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs): Investing in Reproductive Health and Rights? on 11 and 12 April 2005 in Stockholm.
  • Document

    Millennium Development Goals and Sexual and Reproductive Health: Briefing Cards

    2005
    Universal access to sexual and reproductive health education, information, and services is key to achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
  • Document

    Sexual Health, Rights and the MDGs: International Perspectives

    2006
    he Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) address issues of gender equality and empowerment (MDG3), maternal mortality (MDG5), and HIV/AIDS (MDG 6) but do not refer to sexual health. To address this gap, the 17th Congress of the World Association of Sexual Health (Montreal 2005) identified eight goals for achieving sexual health.
  • Document

    Public Choices, Private Decisions: Sexual and Reproductive Health and the Millennium Development Goals

    United Nations Development Programme, 2006
    Apart from being important in and of itself, ensuring universal access to sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) is instrumentally important for achieving many of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). This report brings out the linkages between the Programme of Action from the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) and the MDGs.

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