Kennen Sie schon unseren Geschäftskundenservice? Wir beraten Sie gerne.
Fokusthemen
Publikationen
Services
Autorinnen/Autoren
Verlag
Shop
LEXIA
Zeitschriften
SachbuchLOKISemaphor
Population Control as a Human Right

Population Control as a Human Right

International Law and the Global Quest to Curb Overpopulation

Inhalt

Concerns about global overpopulation spread rapidly in the 1940s and still persist today. The UN Resolution on Human Rights and Family Planning (1968) provided justifications for the argument that population growth endangered the realization of human rights and codified a right to contraception to halt this growth. Conversely, human rights were also invoked on the other side of this debate, with family planning regarded as an essential individual right independent of demographic considerations. Roman Birke explores how human rights became central to this debate, utilised by international actors including NGOs, the women's movement, international lawyers, and institutions such as the United Nations. He analyses how couples' intimate choices related to domestic and international policy, and how this varied across the world, through case studies of India, Ireland, the USA, and Yugoslavia. This is an essential contribution to the evolving literature on the role of reproductive politics in global political landscapes.

Bibliografische Angaben

Oktober 2025, Human Rights in History, Englisch
Cambridge Academic
978-1-009-60116-0

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Schlagworte

Weitere Titel der Reihe: Human Rights in History

Alle anzeigen

Weitere Titel zum Thema