Feminine Cities: New Orleans in the Work of John Gregory Brown

Artemis Michailidou
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

IntroductionReducing high levels of teenage pregnancy has long been a challenge in Sierra Leone. In 2013, the country ranked among the ten nations with the highest rates of teenage pregnancy in the world, with 28% of girls aged 1519 years pregnant or already having had at least one birth (UNFPA, 2015). Nearly 40% of women between the ages of 20 and 24 had their first child before the age of 18 (UNFPA, 2013: 15). The majority of teenagers are sexually active, with a 2013 survey of 3,000 15-to-35-year-old female and male respondents finding that 95% were currently sexually active and half of the sexually active females had their first sexual experience at the age of 16 (Marie Stopes, 2013). The same survey found that only 45% reported using any contraceptive method (Marie Stopes, 2013: 2). A reported increase during the Ebola outbreak raised the profile of teenage pregnancy and led to significant investments of donor resources to address the problem. UNFPA (2015) have since reported that 18,119 girls became pregnant during the Ebola epidemic in Sierra Leone. While there are no concrete figures on pregnancy rates prior to the epidemic with which to compare, this is widely considered to be a significant increase.Governmental and aid funding to address this challenge has been channeled towards priorities laid out in Sierra Leone's National Strategy for the Reduction of Teenage Pregnancy, launched in 2012 by President Ernest Bai Koroma. This Strategy came to an end in 2015, with a new National Strategy to be developed in 2016. It is therefore an opportune moment to reflect on the nature of the problem of teenage pregnancy in Sierra Leone and efforts to reduce it, and to think creatively about how to move forward with current and new programming. This analysis of the complexities of the issue of teenage pregnancy in Sierra Leone may also be informative for policymakers and practitioners elsewhere in the region and internationally who are grappling with similar issues.This paper builds on two stages of research in Sierra Leone aimed at examining donor-supported programming around the reduction of teenage pregnancy. It seeks to understand some of the common approaches that donor and non-governmental (NGO) programs have adopted to deal with this problem, and explore how these efforts play out at the local level. The intention is to provide reflections and analysis that can inform the development of the new National Strategy and assist in refining programming to reduce teenage pregnancy. Overwhelmingly, our research finds that there is a need to shift the focus of interventions from changing girls' behavior to changing the contexts in which they are becoming pregnant. That is, much programming to date has focused on encouraging girls to abstain from sex, use contraception, stay in school, and generally make "better" choices. Some important progress has been made as a result - adolescent fertility rates (number of births per 1,000 women ages 15-19) have dropped from 164.5 in 1997 to 125.3 in 2012 (World Bank, 2015). Yet this approach overlooks the fact that girls' behavior and decisions are the outcome of a much wider context, and it is this context that constrains their options and incentivizes girls to make the decisions and behave in the ways that they do. In order to realistically reduce teenage pregnancy, programming must aim to change the circumstances in which girls are making decisions that lead to early pregnancy - not merely to encourage girls to make decisions against the odds. In addition, it must account for and respond to widespread sexual abuse and exploitation of girls, about which girls themselves can make can make essentially no decisions at all. These are not easy tasks, and involve grappling with complex and systemic issues like gendered power relations and relative poverty that puts teenage girls in vulnerable situations. Yet if programming continues to focus overwhelmingly on girls, we are asking those with the least power and resources to carry the burden of change. …
女性城市:约翰·格雷戈里·布朗作品中的新奥尔良
长期以来,减少高水平的少女怀孕一直是塞拉利昂面临的挑战。2013年,该国是世界上少女怀孕率最高的十个国家之一,1519岁的女孩中有28%怀孕或至少生育过一次(联合国人口基金,2015年)。近40%的20至24岁女性在18岁之前生了第一个孩子(联合国人口基金,2013:15)。大多数青少年性行为活跃,2013年对3000名15- 35岁的男女受访者进行的一项调查发现,95%的人目前性行为活跃,一半的性活跃女性在16岁时有了第一次性经历(Marie Stopes, 2013)。同一项调查发现,只有45%的人报告使用任何避孕方法(Marie Stopes, 2013: 2)。据报道,在埃博拉疫情爆发期间,少女怀孕的情况有所增加,这提高了人们对少女怀孕的关注,并导致捐助者投入大量资源来解决这一问题。此后,人口基金(2015年)报告称,塞拉利昂埃博拉疫情期间有18119名女孩怀孕。虽然没有关于疫情前怀孕率的具体数字可供比较,但人们普遍认为这是一个显著的增长。为应对这一挑战而提供的政府和援助资金已被用于欧内斯特·巴伊·科罗马总统于2012年发起的《塞拉利昂减少少女怀孕国家战略》中列出的优先事项。该战略于2015年结束,2016年将制定一项新的国家战略。因此,这是一个反思塞拉利昂少女怀孕问题的性质和减少这一问题的努力的好时机,并创造性地思考如何推进现有的和新的方案编制。对塞拉利昂少女怀孕问题复杂性的分析也可能为本区域和国际上正在努力解决类似问题的其他地方的决策者和从业人员提供信息。本文建立在塞拉利昂两个阶段的研究基础上,旨在审查捐助者支持的围绕减少少女怀孕的方案。它试图了解捐助者和非政府组织(NGO)项目为解决这一问题所采取的一些共同方法,并探讨这些努力如何在地方一级发挥作用。其目的是提供反思和分析,为新的国家战略的制定提供信息,并协助改进减少少女怀孕的方案编制。我们的研究发现,有必要将干预的重点从改变女孩的行为转移到改变她们怀孕的环境上。也就是说,到目前为止,很多项目都集中在鼓励女孩戒绝性行为、使用避孕措施、继续上学,以及通常做出“更好”的选择上。因此取得了一些重要进展——青少年生育率(每1000名15-19岁妇女的生育人数)从1997年的164.5下降到2012年的125.3(世界银行,2015年)。然而,这种方法忽视了一个事实,即女孩的行为和决定是一个更广泛的背景的结果,正是这个背景限制了她们的选择,并激励女孩做出决定,以自己的方式行事。为了切实减少少女怀孕,项目必须着眼于改变女孩做出导致早孕的决定的环境,而不仅仅是鼓励女孩做出不顾可能性的决定。此外,它必须解释和应对普遍存在的对女孩的性虐待和性剥削,而女孩自己基本上无法做出任何决定。这些任务并不容易,需要解决复杂的系统性问题,如性别权力关系和使少女处于弱势地位的相对贫困。然而,如果项目继续压倒性地关注女孩,我们就要求那些最没有权力和资源的人承担起变革的重担。…
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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