توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Fertility, Health and Reproductive Politics: Re-imagining Rights in India
نام کتاب : Fertility, Health and Reproductive Politics: Re-imagining Rights in India
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : باروری، سلامت و سیاست باروری: بازبینی حقوق در هند
سری : Routledge Contemporary South Asia Series 132
نویسندگان : Maya Unnithan
ناشر : Routledge
سال نشر : 2019
تعداد صفحات : 249
ISBN (شابک) : 9781138610965 , 9780429465482
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 6 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of
Contents
List of
Figures
Preface and acknowledgements
Table of Acronyms
Chapter 1: Fertile subjects: Global reproductive politics at the intersections of caste, class and gender
Experiencing institutional change: birth as context in Rajasthan
Key concepts: power, emotion and agency
Situating power in the context of gender, caste and class in India
Power, emotion and reproductive agency
A maternal-centric reproductive health and rights discourse
The maternal and sexual in everyday social reproduction
Methods in entangled fields
Some facts and figures: the benefits and limits of databases
A guide to the chapters in this book
Notes
Bibliography
Chapter 2: State empowerment and reproductive control
Population, fertility and health in colonial discourse in India
Providing choice, taking control: state family planning at the crossroads
Renewed emphases on sterilisation in rights-based reproductive and child health programmes (1997–2005)
Diffusing and/or consolidating state authority? Civil society and the challenge of rights work
Koshish
Mutlub
Discussion
Notes
Bibliography
Chapter 3: Infertility and other reproductive anxieties: An ontological challenge to ‘reproductive health’ and ‘rights’
The fear of infertility in Rajasthan
Disruptions: infertility in anthropology
Pakad: being caught by a spirit/healer
The pakad (‘hold’) of the family healer
Pakad beyond the family: the multiple bodies of faith healing
Gyarsi: Matamai and healing through bharna (the ‘filled body’)
Rehman: healing through Jhad-Phoonk (‘the body extended’)
‘Each in their own place’: healing and biomedical cures for sterility
Concluding reflections: the challenge to notions of reproductive health and beyond
Notes
Bibliography
Chapter 4: Sex selective abortion and reproductive agency:
Technology and the discourse on rights
Introduction
Background: pre-natalsex selection in India from the 1980s onwards
The desire for FSA: marriage anxieties and son preference in the context of modernisation
‘Normalising’ FSA: ‘rights’, moralities and new networks of medical authority
Maternal bonding and ways of ‘seeing’
FSA in the broader context of the use of contraceptive technologies
Concluding reflections on agency
Notes
Bibliography
Chapter 5: Maternal risk and its mediation: Learning from health worker vulnerabilities
Precarity in the work of indigenous midwives: managing blood, kinship and household labour
From birth work to ‘multi-purpose’work: the declining relevance of midwives
Being an ASHA: managing the risks of ‘not enough skill’, ‘too much work’ and material deprivation
Asha apne saas ka virodh jub nahi kar sakti to kis ghar mein ja ke ladegi?
Incentives and sentiment
The other side of birth work: sterilisation and the culture of ‘targets’
Concluding discussion
Notes
Bibliography
Chapter 6: Altruism and the politics of legislating reproductive labour:
Why surrogacy matters
Introduction
Why surrogacy matters (as an academic concern)
Surrogate decision-making in context
Lessons from the legal regulation of surrogacy
The ART Regulation Bill [2008, 2010 2014]
Surrogacy (Regulation) Bill 2016
Reproductive autonomy, consent and choice in context
Some final reflections …
Notes
Bibliography
Chapter 7: Making rights real: Legal activism and social accountability
Introduction
Responsible reproduction: the power of duties over rights
Translation, mediation and the practice of rights
Human rights and social accountability
Discussion
Notes
Bibliography
Chapter 8: Re-imagining rights and the quest for reproductive justice
Rights and justice: the (dis)connections
Mobilising for reproductive justice: legal activism, ‘lawfare’ and bodily integrity
In conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Epilogue: The politics of measurement and the meaning of evidence
Global policy and the lived experience of reproductive health and rights
Moving on: taking the ‘body-person’ into account
Notes
Bibliography
Glossary
Index