Search results (7)
  • Madhu Gurung
    1999

    Every year, as millions of women marry, they dream of starting a family, of having their homes filled with tiny cries and the happy laughter of gurgling babies. In India however, pregnancy is too often followed by the question of
    whether the unborn child is a girl or a boy.

  • Dileep Mavalankar, Bharti Sharma
    Population Council
    1999

    Sterilization is the most popular method of contraception in India. The 1992-93 National Family Health Survey found that of the 36.2 percent of eligible couples using any modern method, most (30.7 percent) had been sterilized and only 5.5 percent were using temporary methods (IIPS 1995).

  • Lakshmi Lingam
    Kali for Women
    1998

    The high female infant mortality rates (Miller, 1985), the practice of female infanticide (Krishnaswamy, 1988), the neglect of female children with regard to access to health services, nutrition (Sen and Sengupta 1983) and education (Mankekar, 1985), and the sexual abuse of girls (Bhalerao, 1985)

  • Mohan Rao
    Economic and Political Weekly
    1998

    The quinacrine trials raise a host of questions regarding the safety of this method of sterilization and the methodology used to assess this.

  • Mohan Rao
    Health for Millions
    1997

    Otempora! O mores! This cri decoeur will perhaps be evoked in those reading the spate of reports lately, on surreptitious "trials" on the non-surgical sterilization of women with quinacrine, being carried out by NG0s and private doctors in a host of places in the country.

  • S.K. Basu
    Social Change
    1993

    The tribal population groups from 7.95 percent of the total population of India. About 67.76 million persons have been enumerated in the country (excluding Jammu & Kashmir) as members of the Scheduled Tribes (1991 census).

  • Vina Mazumdar

    How does one analytically locate the social phenomenon manifested in India during the last few years since the advent of sex-selection technology in the mid- 70s?