251 Arrow Publications

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access to quality gender-sensitive health services

Published in 2003

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The Asian-Pacific Resource and Research Centre for Women (ARROW) is committed to supporting efforts in mainstreaming gender perspectives in health, population and reproductive health policies and programmes. One of ARROW’s strategies for policy advocacy is to build a body of knowledge on action research that focuses on analyses of health policies and programmes. ARROW therefore […]

annual report 2003 – promoting and defending women’s health and rights –

Published in 2003

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2003 was a very special year for us for many reasons but in particular because we celebrated our 10th anniversary in an event with our Board of Directors, Programme Advisory Committee and women activist partners from 11 countries. Over the course of the past decade, ARROW has become an organization which is recognized globally for […]

arrow for change – strengthening community participation and accountability in SRHR

Published in 2003

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Since the 1990s there has been renewed interest in community participation has stemmed from both the neo-liberal agenda of mobilising community resources due to cutback on social budgets, and the emergence of radical debates on rights of citizens to participate in policy decisions, monitoring and evaluation. In the sphere of health, the neo-liberal perspective is […]

arrow for change – eliminating violence against women through health services

Published in 2002

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Violence against women (VAW) in the forms of domestic violence, coercive sex, rape and trafficking in women, remains common in the lives of many Asian and Pacific women, seriously affecting their physical and psycho-social health. The prevalence of domestic violence, for example, ranges from 16 per cent in the Philippines to 67 per cent in […]

arrow for change – applying the CEDAW convention for the recognition of women’s health rights

Published in 2002

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Continue reading arrow for change – applying the CEDAW convention for the recognition of women’s health rights at Arrow.

arrow for change – risky business: women and occupational health

Published in 2001

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While economists and development professionals generally extol the benefits of industrial development, few mention the hidden costs of increased deaths and fatalities at work. Women are amongst the injured and dead as they have “enjoyed” the greatest rise in labour force participation, mainly in lowly paid, low skill manufacturing jobs. Increasingly women’s work is dispersed, […]

women’s health needs and rights in southeast asia – a beijing monitoring report

Published in 2001

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In the Fourth World Conference on Women that took place in Beijing in 1995 governments agreed on the Platform For Action (PFA). It highlighted twelve areas of critical concern, one of which is women and health. This report is an outcome of the first regional effort in Asia- Pacific by women NGOs to systematically monitor […]

arrow for change – women’s well-being: reframing mental health

Published in 2001

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Women need to have control of their lives in order to be physically and mentally healthy. Poverty, gender power relations, gender discrimination and violence against women as the main social determinants of women’s mental health have reduced this control and thus these factors need to be urgently addressed. Central to women’s NGO work in Asia […]

arrow for change – maternal mortality: why women need not die

Published in 2001

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To this day, women continue to die from the age-old and most common complications of pregnancy and childbirth – hemorrhage, infections, unsafe abortion, obstructed labour, and the hypertensive disorders of pregnancy. In 1995, the latest estimated number of maternal deaths globally was 515,000. Of these deaths, 53 per cent (272,000) occurred in Africa, 42 per […]

arrow for change – the health rights of migrant women

Published in 2000

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Current globalisation strategies, restructuring of economies through structural adjustment programmes and removal of protective regulations for cheap, temporary contractual workers favour migrant labour. Poverty, conflicts, environmental catastrophes, forced displacement and changes in production processes have increased migration. The demand for cheap, flexible, contractual and deregulated labour has also encouraged highly organised recruitment. The demand for […]