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STERILISATION (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   128880


Muslim self-exclusion and public health services in Delhi / Nasir, Rosina   Journal Article
Nasir, Rosina Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This study is an account, largely based on field research, of how Muslims in Delhi experience the public healthcare sector. It identifies how negative memories of the Indian Emergency and sterilisation campaigns of that time may still get recalled today whenever any untoward incident happens concerning Indian Muslims in relation to public health services. The research seeks to identify to what extent this kind of historical memory translates into perceptions of disadvantage that then gradually initiate a process of self-exclusion, reinforcing a spiral of disadvantage.
Key Words Ethnicity  Health  India  Public health  Psychology  Muslims 
Communalism  Identity  Discrimination  Stereotypes  Delhi  Family Planning 
Emergency Exclusion  Formation Memory  Old Delhi  Sterilisation  History 
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2
ID:   152351


My wife had to get sterilised: exploring women’s experiences of sterilisation under the emergency in India, 1975–1977 / Scott, Gemma   Journal Article
Scott, Gemma Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Existing scholarship on the Emergency’s sterilisation programme largely excludes women’s experiences, echoing the Shah Commission of Inquiry’s focus on men’s complaints against the government in its published reports. This paper re-orients historical understandings of this programme to account for female sterilisation during 1975–1977. By reading the Commission’s extensive collection of archived files against the grain, I use the male-dominated archive to illuminate the gendered nature of this policy and its effects on India’s women. Against dominant perceptions that the Emergency’s sterilisation programme focused entirely on vasectomy, this paper discusses instances where women were critical in families’ attempts to negotiate the regime’s coercive measures. It also analyses the negative impacts of coercion on the ‘girl child’ and the consequences of the Emergency’s single minded focus on sterilisation for the Mother and Child Health programme. Through these discussions I argue that such measures exacerbated existing gendered biases. In doing so, this paper challenges dominant understandings of the Emergency’s sterilisation programme and explores women’s experiences.
Key Words Women  Family Planning  Maternal Health  Sterilisation  Indian Emergenc 
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