Making Rights Real: Fertility Politics and Legal Activism
By: Martin Wingfield
Last updated: Tuesday, 6 March 2018
Prof Maya Unnithan on ‘Making Rights Real: Fertility Politics and Legal Activism’ as a part of the Occasional Talks Series at CLPR.
Abstract of the Talk:
Human rights-based approaches have become prevalent in development policy and discourse on population planning (fertility control) and maternal health in India from the mid-1990s when the UN international human rights system began to use and develop the language of reproductive rights. This period has also seen strong civil society activism to ‘translate’ rights (‘make rights real’) to bridge the gap between the rhetoric of policy and the reality of access to healthcare on the ground. But how do development actors interpret and mobilise universal rights-based ideas in a context with a long history of indigenous rights discourse? And to what effects? Drawing on the diverse ethnographic accounts of sexual reproductive rights activists and health rights groups in Rajasthan as well as legal aid organisations Prof Maya Unnithan will discuss how through their instrumental and normative use of rights-based frameworks, civil society actors reinforce but also challenge neoliberal modes of health governance. More generally she suggests that anthropological work on rights helps elucidate the cultural politics of globalisation.
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