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The achievements and challenges of the world's largest multilateral
donor population programs In the thirty years since the United
Nations Population Fund was founded, overall population growth
rates have slowed, infant and maternal mortality have been reduced,
and women have achieved improved access to reproductive health
services. Yet, a multitude of problems remain, including the aging
of Western European populations and the growth of others in the
Third World, the impact of AIDS, and increases in migration and
refugees. An Agenda for People examines the past achievements as
well as the current and future challenges of the world's largest
multilateral donor population programs. Through essays by experts
in the field of development, this book tackles a series of probing
questions. How has the Fund evolved and built global support? How
have the major international conferences on population and
environments shaped the global population agenda? What is the
relationship between reproductive rights and human rights? What are
the links between population and resource use and abuse? And how
does the Fund help to integrate impoverished populations into
national development strategies? This book provides an invaluable
assessment of the state of world population programs and a
fascinating look into the future of community development.
Contributors include Tevia Abrams, John Caldwell, Sylvie Cohen,
Rebecca Cook, Mahmoud Fathalla, Noeleen heyzer, Don Hinrichsen,
Stafford Mousky, Mohammad Nizamuddin, Fred Sai, Sara Sems, Steven
W. Sinding, Jyoti Shankar Singh, and Bradman Weerakoon.
How has the Islamic view of marriage, family formation and child
rearing developed and adapted over the centuries? Is contraception
just permitted or actively encouraged? The family is the basic
social unit of Islamic society. Even without compelling population
pressures, there has been concern with spacing and family planning.
This book is the result of a massive research project, gathering
fourteen centuries (the seventh to the twentieth) of views on
family formation and planning, as expressed by leading Islamic
theologians and jurists. The work has been discussed and shaped at
each stage by a committee of Islamic experts representing the
majority of the Muslim countries. The book provides a much needed
source of reference and will be of equal value and interest to
professionals in health care and development work and to those
working in the academic disciplines of Middle East studies,
religion and population studies.
How has the Islamic view of marriage, family formation and child
rearing developed and adapted over the centuries? Is contraception
just permitted or actively encouraged?
The family is the basic social unit of Islamic society. Even
without compelling population pressures, there has been concern
with spacing and family planning. This book is the result of a
massive research project, gathering fourteen centuries (the seventh
to the twentieth) of views on family formation and planning, as
expressed by leading Islamic theologians and jurists. The work has
been discussed and shaped at each stage by a committee of Islamic
experts representing the majority of the Muslim countries.
The book provides a much needed source of reference and will be of
equal value and interest to professionals in health care and
development work and to those working in the academic disciplines
of Middle East studies, religion and population studies.
The achievements and challenges of the world's largest multilateral
donor population programs In the thirty years since the United
Nations Population Fund was founded, overall population growth
rates have slowed, infant and maternal mortality have been reduced,
and women have achieved improved access to reproductive health
services. Yet, a multitude of problems remain, including the aging
of Western European populations and the growth of others in the
Third World, the impact of AIDS, and increases in migration and
refugees. An Agenda for People examines the past achievements as
well as the current and future challenges of the world's largest
multilateral donor population programs. Through essays by experts
in the field of development, this book tackles a series of probing
questions. How has the Fund evolved and built global support? How
have the major international conferences on population and
environments shaped the global population agenda? What is the
relationship between reproductive rights and human rights? What are
the links between population and resource use and abuse? And how
does the Fund help to integrate impoverished populations into
national development strategies? This book provides an invaluable
assessment of the state of world population programs and a
fascinating look into the future of community development.
Contributors include Tevia Abrams, John Caldwell, Sylvie Cohen,
Rebecca Cook, Mahmoud Fathalla, Noeleen heyzer, Don Hinrichsen,
Stafford Mousky, Mohammad Nizamuddin, Fred Sai, Sara Sems, Steven
W. Sinding, Jyoti Shankar Singh, and Bradman Weerakoon.
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