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Academia, Género,
Derecho y Sexualidad.

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Palabras clave: 'El Sofá'.
2 coincidencia(s) encontradas.

Video

Prejuicios

María Mercedes Gómez
2015 | Canal Capital

El domingo 13 de septiembre, a las 9:30 pm por Canal Capital, EL SOFÁ, dedicará su espacio a hablar sobre los prejuicios, para ello nos acompañará María Mercedes Gómez, Politóloga y abogada colombiana, coordinadora para Latinoamérica y el Caribe de la International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission, quien nos explica como los prejuicios, que son opiniónes preconcebidas, generalmente negativas, hacia algo o alguien son nocivas para la sociedad y en nuestro contexto dañinas hacia las personas de los sectores LGBTI.

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Tesis

Abortion, health and gender stereotypes: A critical analysis of the Uruguayan and South African Abortion Laws Through the Lens of Human Rights

Lucía Berro Pizzarossa
2019 | University of Groningen

Despite being a very common and relatively safe procedure, abortion is subjected to extensive regulation, worldwide. Using the framework of human rights, this thesis critically engages with national legislative responses—considered to be ‘good abortion laws’—, to assess the extent to which they comply with states’ international obligations.

This study grapples with the instrumental and constructive approach of the law, insofar as the law impacts both the enjoyment of sexual and reproductive health (by restricting access to abortion), and the regulation of the procedure in ways that foster stereotyped ideas about women’s roles in society. It also engages with human rights in their dual role: as a regulation of states’ powers (as a limit to, and framework for, states’ legislative choices on abortion), and as a challenge to the structures of thought that drive inequalities (the eradication of gender stereotypes, reflected in and perpetuated by the abortion laws).

This dissertation concludes that certain models for abortion law, which are widely praised and featured as liberal, often fail to comply with human rights. By critically analysing the ‘requirements’ set by these laws, and the stereotypes that emerge from parliamentary debates, this thesis unveils the myriad of human rights violations that often go unseen, and are currently inadequately addressed under international human rights law.

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