ISBN:
9780429509148
Language:
English
Pages:
1 online resource (135 pages)
Series Statement:
Routledge Studies in Public Health Series
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
DDC:
613.95000000000005
Keywords:
Sexual health
;
Electronic books
;
Sexual health
Abstract:
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.
Note:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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