This publication documents the prevalence of harmful practices for women and girls in 57 developed and developing countries. It examines practices such as female genital mutilation, child marriages, gender-based violence and maternal death. It highlights their impact on girls’ and women’s psychological and physical health, well-being and reproductive rights throughout their lives, the impact on demographics, national economies, development and achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals. The State of World Population is an annual report published by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).
Creator
Kollodge, Richard > (ed.)
Baker, Daniel
Baric, Stephanie
[et al.]
The state of world population 2011
Creator
Crossette, Barbara
Kollodge, Richard
The state of world population 2011
Creator
Crossette, Barbara
Kollodge, Richard
The State of World Population 2014
Creator
Kollodge, Richard > (ed.)
The State of World Population 2014
Creator
Kollodge, Richard > (ed.)
State of world population 2017
Creator
Kollodge, Richard > ed.
State of world population 2017
Creator
Kollodge, Richard > ed.
State of world population 2018
Creator
Kollodge, Richard > ed.
State of world population 2018
Creator
Kollodge, Richard > ed.
State of world population 2019
Creator
Kollodge, Richard > (ed.)
[et al.]
State of world population 2019
1. The struggle for rights and choices is an ongoing one: 2. Six women, six decades, six journeys: 3. Rights at risk in times of population growth: 4. Available but inaccessible: 5. The obstacle underlying all others: 6. When services collapse: 7. Institutions and funding to ensure rights and choices’: 8. Realizing rights and choices for all: If not now, when? : 9. More than my mother, less than my daughter.
Creator
Kollodge, Richard > (ed.)
[et al.]
The State of World Population 2016
Creator
Jejeebhoy, Shireen
Chalasani, Satvika
Bloom, David E.
Edmeades, Jeffrey
Luchsinger, Gretchen
Searle, Louise
Thompson, Lyric
Kollodge, Richard
Ruiz, Katheline
The State of World Population 2016
'Millions of 10-year-old girls end up with poor protection of their rights and well-being. Too many become labourers, primary performers of household chores, wives or sex-trafficked commodities. Childhood ends with limited education or opportunities, with violence or ill-health, with no say in decisions. .The State of World Population 2016 includes glimpses into the lives and aspirations of 10 girls from diverse backgrounds.'