Sustainable Sexual Health Analysing the Implementation of the SDGs.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Milton :
Taylor & Francis Group,
2020.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Half Title
- Series
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- Background and contexts: sustainability as carnal policies
- Power and politics in global health: a backdrop for the Sustainable Development Goals and sexual health
- Theoretical influence
- Concluding remarks
- 2 The history, rise, and proliferation of "sustainability"
- Sustainable development
- a boundary concept of meaning
- Roots in forestry
- Connecting sex to population control: the historical intersections between sex and sustainable development
- 3 The genealogy of the concept of sexual health
- Sexual health and the World Health Organization: a beginning
- Buildup to the Sustainable Development Goals: sexual health in the 2000s
- Establishing connections between sex, sexuality, health, responsibility, and rights
- Balancing freedom, responsibility, and rights
- Sexual rights
- Dual responsibility
- Sexual health as a public health issue
- Inscribing sexual health in the logic of biopolitics
- Act responsibly
- abstinence
- Support and encouragement of people living with HIV
- Concluding remarks
- 4 The global promise to "end AIDS": a double-duty paradox or genuine solidarity?
- Introduction
- Global promises: ending AIDS in the Sustainable Development Goal era
- "HIV both starts and stops with me": from a global promise to a personal obligation
- Concluding remarks on the double-duty paradox to end AIDS
- 5 Problematizing "sexual health"
- Introduction
- Problematizing national sexual health strategies in Europe
- How to analyze sexual health in policy and action plans: a few words on methods
- Preventing sexually transmitted infections and HIV in the name of health and sustainability
- Sexual function, pharma, and subjectivities
- Population control and the role of reproductive autonomy
- Sexual health as human rights: linking sexual health to rights and identity
- Incitement to discourse: sexual health and its silences
- 6 Controlling AIDS: the 90-90-90 targets and the politics of counting
- Introduction
- Sustainability in the HIV discourse
- 90-90-90: three metrics as a transformative agenda?
- People and places: focusing on the "right places and the right people"
- Monitoring progress and re-definitions of sustainability
- Sustainable epidemic control
- quantifiable measures
- Sustainability
- conceptual changes
- Reviewing the numbers: what about the 10-10-10?
- Critique of the politics of counting
- Concluding remarks
- 7 Conclusion: sustainable sexual health as governmentality?
- Introduction
- Governing in the name of sustainability
- Towards a sustainable future
- leaving no one behind
- Index