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      Women's Fears and Men's Anxieties: The Impact of Family Planning on Gender Relations in Northern Ghana

      , , ,
      Studies in Family Planning
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          The Navrongo experiment, a family planning and health project in northern Ghana, has demonstrated that an appropriately designed, community-based family planning program can produce a change in contraceptive practice that had been considered unattainable in such a setting. Simultaneously, however, evidence suggests that newly introduced family planning services and contraceptive availability can activate tension in gender relations. In this society, where payment of bridewealth signifies a woman's requirement to bear children, there are deeply ingrained expectations about women's reproductive obligations. Physical abuse and reprisals from the extended family pose substantial threats to women; men are anxious that women who practice contraception might be unfaithful. Data from focus-group discussions with men and women are examined in this report and highlight the strains on gender relations resulting from contraceptive use. The measures taken to address this problem and methods of minimizing the risk of adverse social consequences are discussed.

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          Most cited references15

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          Desired Fertility and the Impact of Population Policies

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            Couples' Fertility and Contraceptive Decision-Making in Developing Countries: Hearing the Man's Voice

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              The buzz outside the clinics: conversations and contraception in Nyanza Province, Kenya.

              When women talk with each other about family planning outside the clinic, are they really only spreading myths and rumors? If nurses give good information about family planning, why do women go and talk with other women? Why would a woman instructed by a nurse at a workshop want to talk to the workshop cleaner as well? To answer these questions, findings are used from a household survey and in-depth interviews that examine the role of informal social interaction in influencing the use of contraceptives in rural Kenya. The women in the study area are found to be ambivalent about family planing, and they supplement providers' instructions with the experiences of women whose bodies and circumstances are similar to their own. Family planning programs could improve their effectiveness by viewing clients and providers not only as individuals but also as members of informal networks that are meaningful to them.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                SIFP
                Studies in Family Planning
                Wiley
                00393665
                17284465
                March 1999
                March 1999
                : 30
                : 1
                : 54-66
                Article
                10.1111/j.1728-4465.1999.00054.x
                10216896
                6cbf2b3a-57e2-43d1-afb7-c5191fc23788
                © 1999

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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