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Supporting the Constellation of Reproductive
Rights
During the 1990s, a series of important United Nations conferences emphasized that the well-being of individuals, and respect for their human rights, should be central to all development strategiews. Particular emphasis was given to reproductive rights as a cornerstone of development.
Reproductive rights were clarified and endorsed internationally
in the Cairo Consensus that emerged from
the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development. This constellation of rights, embracing fundamental
human rights established by earlier treaties, was reaffirmed
at the Beijing Conference and various international and regional
agreements since, as well as in many national laws. They include
the right to decide the number, timing and spacing of children,
the right to voluntarily marry and establish a family, and
the right to the highest attainable standard of living, among others.
Attaining the goals of sustainable, equitable development requires that individuals are able to exercise control over their sexual and reproductive lives. This includes the rights to:
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Reproductive health as a component of overall health, throughout the life cycle, for both men and women
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Reproductive decision-making, including voluntary choice in marriage, family formation and determination of the number, timing and spacing of one's children and the right to have access to the information and means needed to exercise voluntary choice
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Equality and equity for men and women, to enable individuals to make free and informed choices in all spheres of life, free from discrimination based on gender
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Sexual and reproductive security, including freedom from sexual violence and coercion, and the right to privacy.
The importance of reproductive rights in
terms of meeting international development goals has increasingly
been recognized by the international community. In the September 2005 World
Summit, the goal of universal access to reproductive health
was endorsed at the highest level. Reproductive rights are
recognized as valuable ends in themselves, and essential to
the enjoyment of other fundamental rights. Special emphasis
has been given to the reproductive rights of women and adolescent
girls, and to the importance of sex education and reproductive
health programmes.
One of the ways UNFPA can be most effective
in protecting reproductive rights is by influencing policy
and legislation. For example, the Fund works closely with
parliamentarians
and is involved in advocacy
efforts to realize reproductive rights and the other goals
set forth in the ICPD. In Guatemala, the Fund helped build
consensus among a wide range of stakeholders that led to passage
of a groundbreaking
law that promotes better health for women and their families.
In other cases, such as in Ecuador,
UNFPA has helped enforce compliance of existing laws that
protect reproductive rights.
UNFPA is increasingly active in protecting
reproductive rights during humanitarian response efforts and
institutionalizing them during post-conflict reconstruction,
rehabilitation and peace building, as called for by UN
Security Council resolution 1325.
The Fund also works to protect reproductive rights in the following thematic areas:
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