HustonPerdita, 1979, Third World Women Speak Out, New York: Praeger Publishers.
2.
KossM., in press. “Detecting the Scope of Rape: A Review of Prevalence Research Methods,”Journal of Interpersonal Violence.KilpatrickDean1992. “Rape in America: A Report to the Nation,” Charleston, SC,: Crime Victims Research and Treatment Center.
3.
Consumers Association of Penang, 1988, Rape in Malaysia, Penang, Malaysia.
4.
PerezAmelia Marquez, 1990, “Aproximacion Diagnostica a Las Violaciones de mujeres en Los Distritos de Panama y San Miguelito.” Centro Para el Desarrollo de la Mujer, Universidad de Panama.
5.
PotugalAna Maria, 1988, “Cronica de una Violacion Provocada?”Revista Mujer/Fempress: Contraviolencia.Chile: FEMPRESS-ILET.
6.
BradleyChristine, 1990, “Why Male Violence Against Women is a Development Issue: Reflections from Papua New Guinea,” occasional paper, New York, N.Y.: United Nations Fund for Women (UNIFEM).
7.
COVAC, 1990, “Evaluacion de Proyecto para Educacion, Capacitacion, y Atencion a Mujeres y Menores de Edad en Materia de Violencia Sexual, Enero a Diciembre 1990.”Mexico City: Asociacion Mexicana Contra la Violencia a las Mujeres, A.C. (COVAC).
8.
KilpatrickD., 1992, Rape in America: A Report to the Nation, Charleston, SC: Crime Victims Research and Treatment Center.
9.
Data from “Ban Thanom Rak,” a home for rape survivors run by the Friends of Women, Bangkok, Thailand as quoted in ArchavanitkuiK. and PramualratanaA., 1990, “Factors Affecting Women's Health in Thailand,” Paper presented at the Workshop on Women's Health in Southeast Asia. Population Council, Jakarta, October 29–31, 1990.
10.
Private communication with Dr. Bonnie Dattel, Medical Director of the San Francisco Rape Crisis Center and Associate Professor OB-GYN at the University of California, San Francisco, March 4, 1992.
11.
COVAC, 1990, “Evaluacion de Proyecto para Educacion, Capacitacion, y Atencion a Mujeres y Menores de Edad en Materia de Violencia Sexual, Enero a Diciembre 1990.” Mexico City: Asociacion Mexicana Contra la Violencia a las Mujeres. CAMVAC 1985, “Carpeta de Informacion Basica Para la Atencion Solidaria y Feminista a Mujeres Violadas.” Mexico City: Centro de Apoyo A Mujeres Violadas (CAMVAC). Archavanitkui and Pramuairatana, “Factors Affecting Women's Health in Thailand.” Korea data from Young-HeeShim, 1992, “Sexual Violence Against Women: A Victimization Survey of Seoul Women,” paper presented at the conference on “International Perspective: Crime, Justice and Public Order,” St. Petersburg, Russia, June 21–27.
12.
This figure is quoted in “Rape Can I Have This Child?” a photonovela produced by Movimiento Manuela Ramos, Lima Peru, as part of their campaign to decriminalize abortion in cases of rape.
13.
TreguearL. Tatiana and CarroB. Carmen, Ninas Madres: Recuento de una Experiencia, San Jose, Costa Rica: PROCAL, 1991 as cited in Elizabeth Shrader-Cox, “Violence Against Women in Central America and its Impact on Reproductive Health,” paper presented at the Safe Motherhood Central America Conference, Guatemala, City, January 27–31, 1992.
14.
KresselGideon, (1981), “Sororicide/Filiacide: Homicide for Family Honour,”Current Anthropology22(2):141–158.
15.
GraitcerP. and YoussefZ., 1993, Injury in Egypt An Analysis of Injuries as a Health Problem, USAID and Egyptian Ministry of Health, Cairo, Egypt.
16.
Dixon-MuellerRuth, 1992, “Sexuality, Gender, and Reproductive Health,” draft paper prepared for the International Women's Health Coalition, New York.
17.
EliasChris and HeiseLori, 1993, “The Development of Microbicide: A New Method of HIV Prevention for Women,”working Paper No.6, New York: The Population Council.
18.
By no means is male approval always the greatest determinant of contraceptive use. For studies indicating where it is, See “Men—New Focus for Family Planning Programs,”Population Reports Series J, No. 33, 1986. Bangladesh data from KincaidD. Lawrence1991, “Family Planning and the Empowerment of Women in Bangladesh,” paper presented at the 119th Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, Atlanta, November 13, 1991.
19.
BanwellStout Suzanna, 1990, “Law, Status of Women and Family Planning in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Suggestion for Action,”Nairobi: The Pathfinder Fund.
20.
Ibid. p. 14.
21.
Mexico example from Evelyn Folch-Lyon; MacorraLuis and SchearerS. Bruce, 1981, “Focus Group and Survey Research on Family Planning in Mexico,”Studies in Family Planning12(12): 409–432. Peru example from Alfredo Fort, 1989, “Investigating the Social Context of Fertility and Family Planning: A Qualitative Study in Peru,”International Family Planning Perspectives15(3):88–94.
22.
CookRebeccca and MaineDeborah, 1987, “Spousal Veto over Family Planning Services,”American Journal of Public Health77(3):339–344.
23.
Population Reports p. J-891.
24.
Folch-Lyon, “Focus Group and Survey Research on Family Planning in Mexico.”
25.
According to the Clearinghouse on Marital and Date Rape in Berkeley California, 18 states recognize rape in marriage under all circumstances. Thirty states require serious bodily injury or the use of a weapon to qualify as rape within marriage (this is more strict than the standard for non-conjugal rape). North Carolina does not recognize conjugal rape unless the husband is living separately and Oklahoma does not recognize rape unless the couple is legally separated. Number of married women reporting being raped from: RusselDiana, 1982, Rape in Marriage, New York: MacMillan.
26.
Young-HeeShim, 1991, “Sexual Violence and its Countermeasures in Korea: A Victimization Survey of Seoul Women.” Summary of a report by the Korean Institute of Criminology as reprinted in the Information Booklet of the Korea Sexual Violence Relief Center, Seoul, Korea.
27.
Forty percent figure from Jacqueline Campbell and Peggy Alford, (1989), “The Dark Consequences of Marital Rape,”American Journal of Nursing, July.
28.
Fifty-eight percent refers to studies in Puerto Rico and Bolivia as cited in “Campana sobre la violencia en contra de la mujer,” Boletin 16–17, Red de Salud de las Mujeres Latinoamericanas y del Caribe, Isis International, Santiago Chile, April 1988. Colombia data from “Estudio Sobre La Violencia Contra La Mujer en la Familia Basado en La Encuesta Realizada a las Mujeres Maltratadas Que Acudieron At Servicio Juridico de ProFamilia Entre E1 15 de Marzo de 1989 y E1 30 de Marzo de 1990,” in La Violencia y Los Derechos Humanos de la Mujer, 1992, Bogata: Profamilia.
29.
Council on Scientific Affairs, 1992, “Violence Against Women: Relevance for Medical Practitioners,”Journal of the American Medical Association, 267(23):3184–3189.
30.
Philippines data cited in Laurie Liskin, (1981), “Periodic Abstinence: How Well Do New Approaches Work?”Population Reports, Baltimore, Md.: Population Information Program, Johns Hopkins University.
31.
Preliminary Report (1991) “Guatemala City Women: Empowering a Vulnerable Group for HIV Prevention,”Guatemala City: DataPro SA and the Asociacion Guatemalteca para la Prevencion y Control del SIDA.
32.
SkrobanekSiriporn, “Violence Against Women in the Family: The Case of Thailand,”Bangkok: Foundation for Women as cited in Archavanitkul and Pramualratana “Factors Affecting Women's Health in Thailand.”.
33.
FreibergPeter, 1991, “Condom Use: Burden Shouldn't Be Woman's,”Christian Science Monitor.
34.
PerlezJane, (1990), “For the Oppressed Sex, Brave Words to Live By,”New York Times, June6.
35.
WorthDooley, 1989, “Sexual Decision-Making and AIDS: Why Condom Promotion among Vulnerable Women is Likely to Fail,”Studies in Family Planning20(6): 297–307.
36.
Elias and Heise op cit.
37.
For a review of the incidence and prevalence research see: David Wolfe, Vicky Wolfe, and Connie Best, “Child Victims of Sexual Abuse,” in Van HasseltVincent (eds), Handbook of Family Violence1988. New York: Plenum Press.
38.
BoyerDebra and FineDavid, 1992, “Sexual Abuse as a Factor in Adolescent Pregnancy and Child Maltreatment,”Family Planning Perspectives24(1):4–10. See also WyattGail, 1988, “The Relationship between Child Sexual Abuse and Adolescent Sexual Functioning in Afro-American and White American Women,”Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences528:111–122.
39.
See FinkelhorD., 1987, “The Sexual Abuse of Children: Current Research Reviewed,”Psychiatric Annals17:233–241; and JamesJ. and MeyerdingJ., 1977, “Early Sexual Experience and Prostitution,”American Journal of Psychiatry134:1381–1385.
40.
ZierlerSally, 1991, “Adult Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse and Subsequent Risk of HIV Infection,”81(5):572–575.
41.
WorthDooley, 1991, “Sexual Violence against Women and Substance Abuse,” Paper presented to the Domestic Violence Task Force, New York City.
42.
See for example, MillerB.A.1987. “The Role of Childhood Sexual assault in the Development of Alcoholism in Women,”Violence and Victims2:157–172
43.
HandwerkerPenn, (1991), “Gender Power Difference May be STD Risk Factors for the Next Generation,” Paper presented at the 90th Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, Chicago, Illinois.
44.
Variables controlled for include years in legal or common law union during previous 5 years; raised in lower class home; education of mother; education of father; raised in stable nuclear family; raised solely by mother; raised with a stepfather; degree of affection mother's partner showed her; degree of physical and emotional abuse to mother; degree of affection mother showed son; degree of affection mother's partner showed son; degree mother's partner physically and emotionally abused son; man's educational status; man's occupational status.
45.
McFarlaneJudith1992, “Assessing for Abuse During Pregnancy: Severity and Frequency of Injuries and Associated Entry Into Prenatal Care,”Journal of the American Medical Society267(23):3176–3178.
46.
StarkEvan, 1981, Wife Abuse in the Medical Setting: An Introduction for Health Personnel. Monograph #7, Washington D.C. Office of Domestic Violence. BullockLinda F. and McFarlaneJudith, (1989), “The Birth-Weight/Battering Connection,”American Journal of Nursing. Pp. 1153–1155.
47.
SantiagoRosario Valdez and CoxElizabeth Shrader, 1991, “Violencia Domestica: Caracteristicas y Alternativas de Solucion en Mexico,” paper presented at “Leading the Way Out,” an international conference on violence against women sponsored by the Global Fund for Women, Menlo Park, California.
48.
UgaldeJuan Gerardo, 1988, “Sindrome de la Mujer Agredida,” In Mujer 5, San Jose, Costa Rica: Cefemina.
A'HaleemAsma Mohammed, 1992, “Claiming Our Bodies and Our Rights: Exploring Female Circumcision as an Act of Violence in Africa,” in SchulerMargaret, ed. Freedom from Violence: Women's Strategies from Around the World, New York: UNIFEM.
51.
ToubiaNahid, 1993, Female Genital Mutilation: A Call for Global Action, (available from Women Ink., 777 United Nations Plaza, New York, NY).
52.
PetcheskyRosalind, 1990, Abortion and Woman's Choice: The State, Sexuality, and Reproductive Freedom, Boston: Northeastern University Press.
53.
Quoted in Rosalind Petchesky, “Reproduction, Ethics, and Public Policy: The Federal Sterilization Regulations,”Hasting Center Report, October 1979.
54.
JacobsonJodi, 1991, Women's Reproductive Health: The Silent Emergency. Washington D.C.: Worldwatch Institute.
55.
SaxenianHelen, “Brazil: Women's Reproductive Health,” (unpublished draft) World Bank, December 29, 1989.
56.
HartmanBetsy, Reproductive Rights and Wrongs. p.242.
57.
DinezSimone GriloDr., personal communication, June 7, 1991.
58.
Brazil has the highest rate of cesarean section deliveries in the world. In 1981 an estimated 31 percent of all births were by cesarean compared with under 10 percent in the Netherlands, 15 percent in England and Wales, 20 percent in Canada, and 25 percent in the United States. Rates continue to rise in most countries despite evidence that the increased use of cesarean sections has not reduced infant mortality. In the United States, one highly successful program aimed at eliminating unnecessary caesareans reduced the cesarean rate from 17.5 percent to 11.5 percent, without adverse effects for the mother or infant. A recent review of the literature estimates that perhaps 15 percent of caesareans are medically justified. See SaxenianHelen, 1989, Brazil: Women's Reproductive Health, (draft) Washington D.C.: World Bank.
59.
“Health Services and Maternity in Mexico,”1991Women's Global Network for Reproductive Rights. Newsletter 36. July–September.
60.
EbertsMary, 1992, “Emerging Legal Issues in Health Care.” Paper presented at the 3rd International Conference of the American Society of Law and Medicine. Toronto, Ontario, July.
61.
MenschBarbara, “Quality of Care: A Neglected Dimension.” In Marge Koblinsky; TimyanJudith and GayJill eds. Women's Health: A Global Perspective, Boulder, Co.: Westview Press, 1993.
62.
“Incidents of Violence and Disruption Against Abortion Providers,” 1991, Washington D.C.: National Abortion Federation.
63.
Ibid.
64.
“Depo-Provera: Control of Fertility—Two Feminist Views,”Spare Rib (London), no. 116, March 1982 as quoted in Betsy Hartman, Reproductive Rights and Wrongs, p. 194.
65.
BullockL., 1989, “The Prevalence and Characteristics of Battered Women in a Primary Care Setting. Nurse Practitioner, 14:47–54.
66.
See HeiseLori, 1993, “Violence Against Women: The Missing Agenda,” in Marge KoblinskyTimyanJudith and GayJill eds., Women's Health: A Global Perspective.
67.
Report of the Virucide Meeting, sponsored by the Medical Research Council, Margaret Pyke Center, London, England, April 12, 1991.