"Governmental influence on childbearing: What's really at stake?—Slide " by Population Council
 

Document Type

Presentation

Publication Date

3-10-2025

Abstract

On the sidelines of CSW 69, the Population Council held a thought-provoking discussion on pronatalist policies and their implications for the lives of women and girls.

A growing number of countries seek to increase childbearing to achieve economic and cultural objectives. Speakers explored social, health, economic, and legal impacts of these policies in diverse settings including in China, across North America, and in Indigenous communities.

Speakers and Commentators:

Dr. Rana Hajjeh, President of the Population Council provided introductory remarks and perspective on the Council's work on this issue.

Ms. Yiping Cai, PhD candidate at University of California Irvine, and member of the DAWN Executive Committee spoke on the transition of China’s population policy and how its challenges offer an opportunity to reconfigure social policies centered on justice and equality.

Dr. Joan Kaufman, Senior Director for Academic Programs for the Schwarzman Scholars Program and Lecturer on Global Health at Harvard Medical School, amplified observations with reference to China.

Ms. Judith Bruce, Senior Advisor, Population Council (Moderator)

Professor Shelley Clark, James McGill Professor of Sociology at McGill University, highlighted the impact of pronatalist policies for urban and rural women in the United States, drawing on her own research.

Dr. Kelly Hallman, Founder and Executive Director of the Indigenous Justice Circle, and an enrolled member of the Cherokee nation, centered her remarks on implications of both antinatalist and pronatalist policies for Indigenous girls and women.

Dr. Vladimira Kantorova, Chief of the Fertility and Population Ageing Section of the Population Division, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, United Nations whose research has focused on fertility, reproductive health and family dynamics addressed the demographic foundations—especially in Europe—and the effectiveness (and fairness) of population policies.

Language

English

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