Does contraception benefit women? structure, agency, and well-being in rural Mexico
Por: Nazar Beutelspacher, Austreberta. Doctora [autora].
Zapata Martelo, Emma [autora] | Vázquez García, Verónica [autora].
Tipo de material: Capítulo de libro impreso(a) Tipo de contenido: Texto Tipo de medio: Sin medio Tipo de portador: VolumenTema(s): Anticonceptivos | Programas de planificación familiar | Mujeres rurales | Salud sexual y reproductiva | Educación de la mujerTema(s) en inglés: Contraceptivos | Family planning programs | Rural women | Sexual and reproductive health | Women - EducationDescriptor(es) geográficos: Piedra Labrada, Chicomuselo (Chiapas, México) | Emiliano Zapata, Bella Vista (Chiapas, México) | Conquista Campesina, Tapachula (Chiapas, México) | 20 de Noviembre, Suchiate (Chiapas, México) | Joaquín Miguel Gutiérrez (El Manzano), Tapachula (Chiapas, México) | Congregación Reforma, Tapachula (Chiapas, México) Nota general: Para consultar el capítulo véase el libro con la clasificación 330.082 A4, en SIBE-San Cristóbal En: Amartya sen's work and ideas: a gender perspective / edited by Bina Agarwal, Jane Humpries and Ingrid Robeyns. London, England, United Kingdom : Routledge Taylor & Francis Group : Bina Agarwal, Jane Humphries and Ingrid Robeyns, 2005. páginas 215-240. --ISBN: 0-415-37320-4Número de sistema: 51698Resumen:Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras |
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Capítulos de libro |
Biblioteca San Cristóbal
Texto en la configuración de la biblioteca San Cristóbal |
ECOSUR | 330.082 A4 | Disponible | CFS01000051698 |
Para consultar el capítulo véase el libro con la clasificación 330.082 A4, en SIBE-San Cristóbal
The authors of this paper examine Amartya Sen's contributions to the concept of human well-being from a gender perspective and argue that this concept is particularly useful for explaining women's decisions on contraceptive use. The study draws on data collected in six rural communities of Chiapas, Mexico. It emphasizes the ways in which public discourse articulates the apparent benefits of having small families; the context of the household and community in which rural women make reproductive decisions; and the impact of family planning programs on women's sense of subjective well-being. In particular, it questions the assumption that reduced fertility through contraception necessarily enhances women's well-being and points to the importance that women attach to being a party to reproductive decisions. The authors also explore the links between women's assessment of these decisions and of paid work, and their actual education levels and real possibilities of employment. eng