Search results (7)
  • Ambika Pandit
    Times of India
    2022

    A parliamentary panel in its report tabled on Monday has recommended allowing LGBTQ community members to adopt a child, apart from asserting the need for a uniform and comprehensive legislation on adoption which is more transparent, accountable, verifiable, less bureaucratic and applicable to all

  • Sukla Chatterjee
    Institute of Development Studies, Kolkata
    2010

  • Saroj Pachauri
    The Journal of Family Welfare
    1998

    The magnitude of reproductive and sexual health problems in South Asia is daunting. However, an enabling policy environment provides an opportunity to address unmet needs. Neglected reproductive health problems can be effectively addressed through a life-cycle approach.

  • Anu Gupta, Bharati Roy Choudhury, Indira Balachandran
    Kali for Women
    1997

    In a vast, multi-ethnic, multi-religious country like India, it is to be expected that we have several world-views operating at the same time in people's search for health and healing.

  • Malini Karkal
    Issues in Medical Ethics
    1996

    While a couple, and more specifically women must have access to knowledge and services to regulate fertility, this right is distinctly different from the objectives of the policies of population control.

  • Radha Y. Aras, Nalini P. Pai
    The Journal of Family Welfare
    1995

    Cancer of the cervix is the most prevalent form of cancer in developing countries, and accounts for 25 to 50 per cent of all cancers occurring in Indian women.

  • Gabriele Dietrich
    A Feminist Look at Women, Health and Reproduction in India
    1987

    A crucial contributing factor to the Western development of the women's movement in the west has been what has sometimes been termed as the "sexual revolution" of the post-war period, i.e. acceptance of pre-marital sex and change of sex partners as a fairly normal part of life.