-
-
Written By International Women's Health CoalitionTuesday, 30 March 2004
>>Available in Word and PDF / Available in Spanish
Summary: The following speech about the HIV/AIDS pandemic's devastating impact on women was delivered by Stephen Lewis, the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, at the Microbicides 2004 conference in London, on March 30, 2004. For more information about the conference, please visitwww.microbicides2004.org.uk (5 pages).
-
Written By International Women's Health CoalitionTuesday, 14 October 2003
-
Written By International Women's Health CoalitionThursday, 24 July 2003
-
Written By International Women's Health CoalitionTuesday, 04 February 2003
-
Building Support for Adolescent Health Education and Services in Nigeria: Reflections from the ExperWritten By International Women's Health CoalitionWednesday, 08 May 2002
Adenike Esiet, Executive Director, AHI (Nigeria)Introduction
For Nigeria's over 24 million adolescents aged 10-19, there are several challenges that come with surviving in today's fast-changing world. The traditional norms and behavioral controls that once guided adolescence are breaking down due to several factors that include increasing poverty, rural-urban migration, and the influence of the world media. With the increasing opportunity to acquire formal education, many more young people are spending more years in school and consequently, they are getting married later, especially in the urban areas of Nigeria. -
Written By International Women's Health CoalitionTuesday, 30 November 1999
-
Written By International Women's Health CoalitionTuesday, 30 November 1999
Summary: Statement delivered by Adrienne Germain, President, International Women's Health Coalition, before the Thirty-Eighth Session of the United Nations Commission on Population and Development, New York, April 4, 2005 (2 pages).
-
Written By International Women's Health CoalitionTuesday, 12 October 1999
-
-
-
Written By International Women's Health CoalitionTuesday, 03 February 2009
This post is by Audacia Ray and originally appeared on Our Bodies, Our Blog on January 26, 2009.
Demand for newer and better devices that protect against pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections is constant — partly due to the fact that the process of development, testing and approval takes forever, and partly because what’s on the market often leaves something to be desired.
-
Written By Whitney WelshimerTuesday, 02 December 2008
I walked alongside women, men, youth, and young children at a One in Nine Campaign march earlier this month in Cape Town, South Africa to protest the failure of justice systems worldwide to protect victims of sexual assault, gender-based violence, and murder.
-
Sexual and Reproductive Rights and Health Policies