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Tytuł pozycji:

'There Are No Other Options?': Rwandan Gender Norms and Family Planning in Historical Perspective.

Tytuł:
'There Are No Other Options?': Rwandan Gender Norms and Family Planning in Historical Perspective.
Autorzy:
Jessee E; 409 2 University Gardens, History, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QH, Scotland.
Źródło:
Medical history [Med Hist] 2020 Apr; Vol. 64 (2), pp. 219-239.
Typ publikacji:
Historical Article; Journal Article
Język:
English
Imprint Name(s):
Publication: Jan. 2012- : Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
Original Publication: <1957>-2011: London : Wellcome Historical Medical Library
MeSH Terms:
Religion and Medicine*
Catholicism/*history
Colonialism/*history
Contraception/*history
Family Planning Services/*history
Belgium ; Female ; Gender Identity ; Government Regulation/history ; History, 20th Century ; Humans ; Male ; Missionaries/history ; Religion/history ; Rwanda
References:
Stud Fam Plann. 1990 Jan-Feb;21(1):20-32. (PMID: 2315965)
Reprod Health Matters. 2013 May;21(41):49-56. (PMID: 23684187)
Glob Health Sci Pract. 2015 May 13;3(2):242-54. (PMID: 26085021)
Contributed Indexing:
Keywords: Colonisation; Family planning; Gender norms; Religion; Rwanda
Entry Date(s):
Date Created: 20200415 Date Completed: 20200520 Latest Revision: 20200520
Update Code:
20240105
PubMed Central ID:
PMC7120254
DOI:
10.1017/mdh.2020.4
PMID:
32284635
Czasopismo naukowe
This article surveys the evolution of Rwandan family planning practices from the nation's mythico-historical origins to the present. Rwanda is typically regarded as a patriarchal society in which Rwandan women have, throughout history, endured limited rights and opportunities. However, oral traditions narrated by twentieth-century Rwandan historians, storytellers and related experts, and interpreted by the scholars and missionaries who lived in Rwanda during the nation's colonial period, suggest that gender norms in Rwanda were more complicated. Shifting practices related to family planning - particularly access to contraception, abortion, vasectomies and related strategies - are but one arena in which this becomes evident, suggesting that women's roles within their families and communities could be more diverse than the historiography's narrow focus on women as wives and mothers currently allows. Drawing upon a range of colonial-era oral traditions and interviews conducted with Rwandans since 2007, I argue that Rwandan women - while under significant social pressure to become wives and mothers throughout the nation's past - did find ways to exert agency within and beyond these roles. I further maintain that understanding historical approaches to family planning in Rwanda is essential for informing present-day policy debates in Rwanda aimed at promoting gender equality, and in particular for ensuring women's rights and access to adequate healthcare are being upheld.
(© The Author(s) 2020.)

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