Description

Book Synopsis

Long-acting and reversible contraceptives, such as Norplant and Depo-Provera, have been praised as highly effective, moderately priced, and generally safe. Yet, as this book argues, the very qualities that make these contraceptives an important alternative for individual choice in family planning also make them a potential tool of coercive social policy. For example, policymakers have linked their use to welfare benefits, and judges, to probation agreements. In this book, authors from the fields of medicine, ethics, law, and the social sciences probe the unique and vexing ethical and policy issues raised by long-acting contraception.

The book offers comprehensive ethical guidelines for health care professionals and policymakers, as well as an ethical framework for analyzing policies and practices concerning long?acting contraceptives. The authors consider cultural, social, and ethical issues pertaining to contraception, and they provide historical and scientific background on

Table of Contents
IntroductionEllen H. Moskowitz and Bruce Jennings Part I: Overview and Guidelines Long-Acting Contraceptives: Ethical Guidelines for Policymakers and Health Care ProvidersEllen H. Moskowitz, Bruce Jennings, and Daniel Callahan Part II: Long-Acting Contraception in Context 1. Contraceptive Policy and Ethics: Lessons from American HistoryKathleen E. Powderly 2. Long-Acting Contraceptives: Rationale, Current Development and Ethical ImplicationsGeorge F. Brown Part III: Exploring Conceptual and Theoretical Frameworks 1. The Concept of Coercion and Long-Term ContraceptivesBonnie Steinbock 2. Norplant and Irresponsible ReproductionJohn A. Robertson 3. Reproductive Responsibility and Long-Term ContraceptivesJohn D. Arras and Jeffrey Blustein 4. Long-Term Contraceptives in the Criminal Justice System Rebecca Dresser 5. Other "Isms" Aren't Enough: Feminism, Social Policy and Long-Acting ContraceptionHilde Lindemann Nelson and James Lindemann Nelson Part IV: International Perspectives1. Cultural Difference and Long-Acting ContraceptionRuth Macklin 2. Ethical Issues in the Importation of Long-Acting Contraceptives to NigeriaTola Olu Pearce 3. Long-Acting Contraception in Brazil and the Dominican RepublicEllen Hardy

Coerced Contraception

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    RRP £48.00 – you save £4.80 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Thu 18 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Bruce Jennings

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      View other formats and editions of Coerced Contraception by

      Publisher: Georgetown University Press
      Publication Date: 9/13/1996 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780878403646, 978-0878403646
      ISBN10: 0878403647

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Long-acting and reversible contraceptives, such as Norplant and Depo-Provera, have been praised as highly effective, moderately priced, and generally safe. Yet, as this book argues, the very qualities that make these contraceptives an important alternative for individual choice in family planning also make them a potential tool of coercive social policy. For example, policymakers have linked their use to welfare benefits, and judges, to probation agreements. In this book, authors from the fields of medicine, ethics, law, and the social sciences probe the unique and vexing ethical and policy issues raised by long-acting contraception.

      The book offers comprehensive ethical guidelines for health care professionals and policymakers, as well as an ethical framework for analyzing policies and practices concerning long?acting contraceptives. The authors consider cultural, social, and ethical issues pertaining to contraception, and they provide historical and scientific background on

      Table of Contents
      IntroductionEllen H. Moskowitz and Bruce Jennings Part I: Overview and Guidelines Long-Acting Contraceptives: Ethical Guidelines for Policymakers and Health Care ProvidersEllen H. Moskowitz, Bruce Jennings, and Daniel Callahan Part II: Long-Acting Contraception in Context 1. Contraceptive Policy and Ethics: Lessons from American HistoryKathleen E. Powderly 2. Long-Acting Contraceptives: Rationale, Current Development and Ethical ImplicationsGeorge F. Brown Part III: Exploring Conceptual and Theoretical Frameworks 1. The Concept of Coercion and Long-Term ContraceptivesBonnie Steinbock 2. Norplant and Irresponsible ReproductionJohn A. Robertson 3. Reproductive Responsibility and Long-Term ContraceptivesJohn D. Arras and Jeffrey Blustein 4. Long-Term Contraceptives in the Criminal Justice System Rebecca Dresser 5. Other "Isms" Aren't Enough: Feminism, Social Policy and Long-Acting ContraceptionHilde Lindemann Nelson and James Lindemann Nelson Part IV: International Perspectives1. Cultural Difference and Long-Acting ContraceptionRuth Macklin 2. Ethical Issues in the Importation of Long-Acting Contraceptives to NigeriaTola Olu Pearce 3. Long-Acting Contraception in Brazil and the Dominican RepublicEllen Hardy

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