Ending maternal mortality

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Women are the driving force advancing sexual and reproductive health and rights in Brazil

calendar_today03 May 2021

Carol Nascimento, who promotes women and girls' health, took part in UNFPA and Elas Fund's Driving Force initiative empowering community leaders in Bahia state, Brazil. © UNFPA Brazil/Carol Garcia
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Slideshow

Women are the driving force in Brazil

calendar_today03 May 2021

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<p>In an initiative called Driving Force, UNFPA and Elas Fund supported eight projects empowering women and promoting sexual and reproductive health and rights in Bahia, Brazil. The projects, which took place across nine&nbsp;municipalities with accompanying online content, reached more than 3,000 women aged 12 - 96.&nbsp;</p><p>The Matriarch: Like the <em>Yabás</em> or female Orishas (goddesses), Mameto Laura Borges believes that all women have the strength to prosper within themselves. &quot;Wisdom is the true legacy of our lives,&quot; she said. &quot;It is knowing how to listen and how to speak.&quot; She is a religious leader in Salvador whose doors to her <em>terreiro</em> (place of worship) are open to all &ndash; young, old, cis- and transgender&ndash; to learn about self-care and reproductive health but who also harbor a wish to be supported and heard. &copy; UNFPA Brazil</p>

<p>The Mentor: Some women find their voice on paper. To process past trauma of violence, Luzitânia Silva made up stories and&nbsp;wrote them down&nbsp; &ndash; and began to heal. To help other women and girls with similar experiences, she started creative writing workshops held by the Empowered Girls and Women collective. &quot;There is a fine line,&quot; she said, &quot;between reality and fiction.&quot;&nbsp;&copy; UNFPA Brazil&nbsp;</p>

<p>The Revolutionary: Patricia Santana&#39;s reality as an impoverished Black lesbian was a life of stigma, loneliness and discrimination. Her family took her to a Catholic priest and a Afro-Brazilian priestess to try to &quot;heal&quot; her. To combat persecution and prejudice lesbians face about sexual and reproductive health, she created the <em>Lesbi Saude</em> caravan in partnership with the <em>LesbiBahia</em> collective to educate members of the LGBTQI community throughout Bahia state that they had the right to live in health and safety. &quot;We certainly learned a lot more than we had to teach,&quot; she said.&nbsp;&copy; UNFPA Brazil/Carol Garcia&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>

<p>The Artisan: Samaha Monteiro revived an old pastime &ndash; crochet &ndash; to teach. But teenagers and women learn more than the handicraft. Her&nbsp;collective <em>Crochetando Empoderando </em>(Empowering Crochet),&nbsp;offers free legal assistance and bodily workshops to survivors of violence. She herself had escaped a life of early marriage and motherhood, addiction and domestic abuse after learning about empowerment in an entrepreneurship class she found through an NGO. &quot;What I experienced I don&#39;t want for anyone, especially girls, and I had to find a way to tell that to them,&quot; she said.&nbsp;&copy; UNFPA Brazil&nbsp;</p>

<p>The Influencer: As an activist in the <em>Flores de Dan</em> collective that champions the human rights of the poor, Salvador-born&nbsp;Sueide Kintê found a way to talk to&nbsp;women and girls about taboo topics: they have sexual and reproductive rights&nbsp;and&nbsp;they have a right to health care. Lack of information can wreak damage on the&nbsp;health of those&nbsp;who feel they have no one to turn to for answers or aid. Ms. Kintê&#39;s project, &quot;This Body is My Body,&quot; mobilized digital influencers and content creators to develop materials on sexual and reproductive health and rights for distribution on social media networks and televison. It was, she said, &quot;a game changer.&quot;&nbsp;&copy; UNFPA Brazil</p>

<p>The Communicator: Dina Lopes is also using televison to share information on women&#39;s sexual and reproductive health. Her show, &quot;<em>Conversa de Preta</em>&quot; (Black Talk), which reaches more than three million viewers, has opened a conversation on freedom of choice and fighting for what you want. &quot;We have to use this power to decide our own lives,&quot; she said. Ms. Lopes also wants to draw women out from the shadows:&nbsp;&quot;It was time to give women a voice and opportunity.&quot;&nbsp;&copy; UNFPA Brazil/Carol Garcia&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>

<p>The Storyteller: Lara Carvalho is using her voice to advocate knowing one&#39;s body. Her project, <em>Nossos Ventres</em> (Our Wombs) has produced and disseminated content on menstruation, sexual relations and pregnancy&nbsp;through a documentary, the&nbsp;<em>Lunáticas&nbsp;</em>podcast (named for the collective Ms. Carvalho formed) and a digital book. &quot;Understanding how our body works and our cycles is something we used to have but now have lost,&quot; she said. Her goal is to help women regain that knowledge.&nbsp;&copy; UNFPA Brazil</p>

<p>The Natural: Carol Nascimento, too, is working to restore value to traditional skills. Her collective,&nbsp;<em>Alevante da Terra</em>, which combines her interests of natural medicine, art education and midwifery apprenticeship,&nbsp;promotes health and well-being through dance, theatre and music. Her project, &quot;<em>Mulherada, se Alevante</em>&rdquo; [Ladies, stand up!] shared information on caring for one&#39;s body and dealing with violence, among other topics. Art, she said, &quot;is the medium that unites all languages.&quot;&nbsp;&copy; UNFPA Brazil/Carol Garcia&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>

Speech

54th Session of the Commission on Population and Development

calendar_today19 April 2021

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Publication date

Apr 2020

Author

WHO

Resources

Guidance for contraceptive devices: male latex condoms, female condoms and intrauterine devices

Annex 9: World Health Organisation/ United Nations Population Fund Prequalification Programme guidance for contraceptive devices: male latex condoms, female condoms and intrauterine devices.

Find the full 54th report of the WHO Expert Committee on Specifications for Pharmaceutical Preparations here.

 

State of World Population 2021

Publication date

Apr 2021

Author

UNFPA

State of World Population

State of World Population 2021

My Body is My Own - Claiming the right to autonomy and self-determination

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News

A publication on reproductive health for women with disabilities is published in Braille

calendar_today06 April 2021

A reproductive health booklet for women with disabilities was published in Braille and distributed to libraries and schools for the visually impaired in Kazakhstan. © UNFPA Kazakhstan
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Job description

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About UNFPA

We promote gender equality and empower women, girls and young people to take control of their bodies and their futures.

Learn more

Publication date

Mar 2021

Resources

Terms of reference: Technical Working Group on Specifications of Contraceptive Devices and Personal Lubricants

Publication date

Mar 2021

Resources

Declaration of interest for UNFPA contractors

UNFPA´s work on reproductive health issues requires the assistance of external contractors who may have interests related to their expertise. To ensure the highest integrity and public confidence in its activities, UNFPA requires that contractors serving in an advisory role disclose any circumstances that could give rise to a potential conflict of interest related to the subject of the activity in which they will be involved.

Publication date

2021

Resources

Contraceptive Price Indicator for the year 2020

Contraceptive Price Indicator for the year 2020.

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