The humanitarian emergency in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh is one of three around the world where a Dutch Government funded pilot project is taking place, targeting the sexual and reproductive health (SRH) needs of forcibly displaced women and girls.
Month: December 2018
Family Planning in Humanitarian Crises: An interview with Stanis Ngarukiye, Save the Children Rwanda
Reproductive Health Matters discusses family planning in humanitarian crises with Stanis Ngarukiye, Health and Nutrition Program Manager, Save the Children, Rwanda from the International Family Planning Conference held in Kigali from 12-15 November 2018.
Family Planning in Humanitarian Crises: Deogratias Ndagijimana, Save the Children Rwanda
Reproductive Health Matters discusses family planning in humanitarian crises with Deogratias Ndagijimana, Save the Children, Rwanda from the International Family Planning Conference held in Kigali from 12-15 November 2018.
Family Planning in Humanitarian Crises: Hennia Dakkak, Senior Technical Advisor, UNFPA
Reproductive Health Matters discusses family planning in humanitarian crises with Hennia Dakkak, Senior Technical Advisor, UNFPA from the International Family Planning Conference held in Kigali from 12-15 November 2018.
Family Planning in Humanitarian Crises: An interview with Bill Powell and Dr Sayed Rubayet, IPAS
Reproductive Health Matters discusses family planning in humanitarian crises with Bill Powell and Dr Sayed Rubayet of IPAS from the International Family Planning Conference held in Kigali from 12-15 November 2018.
Family Planning in Humanitarian Crises: An interview with Jennifer Schlecht, Family Planning 2020
Reproductive Health Matters discusses family planning in humanitarian crises with Jennifer Schlecht, Senior Advisor, Emergency Preparedness and Response for Family Planning 2020 from the International Family Planning Conference held in Kigali from 12-15 November 2018.
Why family planning makes a climate-sustainable future more likely
In October, not just one but two high-level reports on climate change warned that the world’s nations are falling short of what’s needed to keep the Earth from overheating dangerously — to the point that it’s time to literally pull carbon dioxide out of the air on a massive scale. Neither report, however, mentioned an opportunity that could help both to constrain emissions and to scrub out some of that carbon: removing barriers to the voluntary use of family planning.