In Our Control (65 page)

Read In Our Control Online

Authors: Laura Eldridge

BOOK: In Our Control
7.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
  
26.
Ibid.
  
27.
Felicia H. Stewart, Wayne C. Shields, and Ann C. Hwang, “Cairo Goals for Reproductive Health: Where Do We Stand at 10 Years?”
Contraception
70, no. 1 (July 2004): 1–2.
  
28.
Ibid.
  
29.
“How Bush Treats Women,” editorial,
Boston Globe
, March 17, 2004.
  
30.
Steven W. Sinding, “What Has Happened to Family Planning Since Cairo and What Are the Prospects for the Future?”
Contraception
78, no. 4 (October 2008): S3-S6.
  
31.
Germain and Kidwell, “Unfinished Agenda,” 90.
  
32.
Ibid., 91.
  
33.
“World Contraceptive Use, 2007,” United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division,
www.unpopulation.org
.
  
34.
John B. Casterline and Steven W. Sinding, “Unmet Need for Family Planning in Developing Countries and Implications for Population Policy,”
Population and Development Review
26, no. 4 (December 2000): 691–723.
  
35.
Emmanuela Gakidou and Effy Vayena, “Use of Modern Contraception by the Poor Is Falling Behind,”
PLoS Medicine
4, no. 2 (February 2007): 381–89.
  
36.
John Bongaarts and Steven W. Sinding, “A Response to Critics of Family Planning Programs,”
International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health
35, no. 1 (March 2009): 39.
  
37.
Ibid., 40
  
38.
John Bongaarts and Judith Bruce, “The Causes of Unmet Need for Contraception and the Social Content of Services,”
Studies in Family Planning
26, no. 2 (March-April 1995): 57–75.
  
39.
Mohamed Ali and John Cleland, “Contraceptive Discontinuation in Six Developing Countries: A Cause-Specific Analysis,”
International Family Planning Perspectives
21, no. 3 (September 1995): 92–97.
  
40.
Ibid.
  
41.
Regine Sitruk-Ware, “Contraception: An International Perspective,”
Contraception
73, no. 3 (March 2006): 215–22.
  
42.
Ibid.
  
43.
Goldberg,
Means of Reproduction
, 230.
  
44.
Bongaarts and Sinding, “Response to Critics,” 40.
  
45.
Ibid.
  
46.
Goldberg,
Means of Reproduction
, 234.

About the Author

LAURA ELDRIDGE
is a women’s health writer and activist living in Brooklyn, New York. Her latest books are
The No-Nonsense Guide to Menopause
and
Body Politic: Dispatches from the Women’s Health Revolution
, with Barbara Seaman.

About Seven Stories Press

SEVEN STORIES PRESS
is an independent book publisher based in New York City, with distribution throughout the United States, Canada, England, and Australia. We publish works of the imagination by such writers as Nelson Algren, Russell Banks, Octavia E. Butler, Ani DiFranco, Assia Djebar, Ariel Dorfman, Coco Fusco, Barry Gifford, Hwang Sok-yong, Lee Stringer, and Kurt Vonnegut, to name a few, together with political titles by voices of conscience, including the Boston Women’s Health Collective, Noam Chomsky, Angela Y. Davis, Human Rights Watch, Derrick Jensen, Ralph Nader, Gary Null, Project Censored, Barbara Seaman, Gary Webb, and Howard Zinn, among many others. Seven Stories Press believes publishers have a special responsibility to defend free speech and human rights, and to celebrate the gifts of the human imagination, wherever we can. For additional information, visit
www.sevenstories.com
.

Other books

Hollows 11 - Ever After by Kim Harrison
War by Shannon Dianne
Whisper Cape by Susan Griscom
Mary Gillgannon by The Leopard
Olivier by Philip Ziegler
Forbidden Embers by Tessa Adams