IN PURSUIT OF THE DEMOGRAPHIC DIVIDEND: THE RETURN OF ECONOMIC JUSTIFICATIONS FOR FAMILY PLANNING IN AFRICA

In pursuit of the demographic dividend: the return of economic justifications for family planning in Africa

In pursuit of the demographic dividend: the return of economic justifications for family planning in Africa

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This article examines the resurgence of economic justifications for Culex nigripalpus Theobald (Diptera, Culicidae) feeding habit at the Parque Ecológico do Tietê, São Paulo, Brazil Hábito alimentar de Culex nigripalpus Theobald (Diptera, Culicidae) no Parque Ecológico do Tietê, São Paulo, Brasil investment in family planning in Africa.In the Cold War period, population control programmes were at the forefront of the Northern development agenda for the Global South; rapid population growth was cast as the enemy of national economic advancement and modernisation.At the United Nations Conference on Population and Development in 1994, global leaders signed on to a Platform of Action that sidelined economic and environmental concerns with population growth in favour of a human rights approach to family planning.

Over the past decade, key sectors of the development community have regained their enthusiasm about the economic and social benefits of reducing fertility in sub-Saharan Africa.A wide variety of multilateral organisations have joined Microbial Biocontrol Strategies for Ambrosia Beetles and Their Associated Phytopathogenic Fungi forces with African governments in a common pursuit: lower fertility to achieve demographic transition and harness the demographic dividend.The article contends that efforts to catalyse the demographic dividend are problematic because pursuing dramatic reductions in fertility (rather than reproductive and contraceptive autonomy) violates human rights approaches to sexual and reproductive health.

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