Sexual Reproductive Rights Fact Sheet
Sexual Reproductive Rights Fact Sheet
Sexual Reproductive Rights Fact Sheet
What
does
it
take
to
meet
the
right
to
sexual
and
reproductive
health?
In
addition
to
identifying
critical
components
of
SRH,
the
ICPD
Programme
of
Action
makes
recommendations
for
ensuring
these
rights
are
met,
including:
Freedom
from
discrimination;
Universal
access
to
education;
Control
of
ones
fertility,
including
the
choice
of
whether
and
when
to
marry
or
have
children,
and
protection
from
forced
sterilization;
Protection
of
the
family
structure,
with
the
understanding
that
there
is
a
great
diversity
of
family
structures
that
are
equally
deserving
of
respect
and
safeguarding;
Recognition
in
policy
and
practice
of
the
links
between
sexual
and
reproductive
health,
development,
and
the
environment;
Prevention
of
early
or
forced
marriage
and
inclusion
of
adolescents
in
planning
and
implementation
of
services
and
programs;
Engagement
of
men
and
boys;
Respect
of
the
sexual
orientation
and
gender
identity
of
all
individuals;
and
Full
funding
at
the
national
and
global
levels
to
ensure
universal
access
to
basic
health
care,
including
SRH.
States
is
one
of
a
very
small
number
of
countries
that
has
not
yet
ratified
the
treaty
(as
of
April
2012,
this
included
only
the
US,
Sudan,
Somalia,
Iran,
Palau,
Tonga,
and
South
Sudan).
CEDAW
advances
the
right
to
sexual
and
reproductive
health
in
many
ways,
including
by
requiring
States
parties
to:
take
all
appropriate
measures
to
eliminate
discrimination
against
women
and
girls,
including
in
the
health
sector;
challenge
harmful
traditional
norms
and
modify
social
and
cultural
patterns
that
arise
from
and
perpetuate
the
notion
that
women
are
inferior
to
men;
ensure
that
men
and
women
are
equally
able
to
determine
the
number,
spacing
and
timing
of
their
childrenincluding
whether
to
have
any
at
alland
have
sufficient
and
accurate
information,
education
and
supplies
to
enable
control
of
fertility;
prevent
early
marriage
and
eliminate
discrimination
against
women
in
marriage
and
family
issues,
such
as
by
ensuring
divorce,
inheritance
and
property
rights;
and
prevent
and
respond
to
violence
against
women.
Other
international
human
rights
documents
support
and
advance
sexual
and
reproductive
health
rights,
including:
Convention
to
Eliminate
All
Forms
of
Racial
Discrimination
(CERD);
Convention
Against
Torture
(CAT);
Convention
on
the
Rights
of
the
Child
(CRC);
Convention
on
the
Rights
of
Persons
with
Disabilities;
Declaration
on
the
Rights
of
Indigenous
People;
Declaration
on
the
Elimination
of
Violence
Against
Women;
Rome
Statute
of
the
International
Criminal
Court;
United
Nations
General
Assembly
Special
Session
Declaration
on
HIV/AIDS;
UN
General
Assembly
Statement
on
Sexual
Orientation
and
Gender
Identity;
and
The
Beijing
Platform
for
Action
of
the
1995
Fourth
World
Conference
on
Women.
In
addition,
sexual
and
reproductive
health
rights
are
central
achieving
the
Millennium
Development
Goals.
In
2000,
193
countries
agreed
to
the
Millennium
Development
Goals
(MDGs),
eight
specific
and
measurable
objectives
for
reducing
extreme
poverty
in
a
manner
that
recognizes
the
interconnectedness
of
many
issues.
The
MDGs
include
time-bound
targets,
with
a
deadline
of
2015.
While
progress
has
been
made
on
many
of
the
MDGs,
one
of
those
furthest
behind
is
MDG
5,
Improve
Maternal
Health.
With
sub-targets
on
reducing
maternal
mortality
and
achieving
universal
access
to
reproductive
health
services,
MDG
5
is
most
directly
linked
to
sexual
and
reproductive
rights.
But
MDG
2
on
Universal
Education,
MDG
3
on
Gender
Equality,
MDG
4
on
Child
Mortality,
and
MDG
6
on
HIV/AIDS,
cannot
be
met
without
universal
access
to
SRR,
nor
can
universal
access
to
sexual
and
reproductive
health
be
met
without
successes
in
these
other
areas.
As
the
global
community
prepares
to
define
targets
to
continue
the
work
of
the
MDGs
after
their
current
2015
deadline,
a
human
rights
framework
would
help
set
meaningful
and
measurable
targets
that
ensure
a
focus
on
the
most
vulnerable
onpopulations
and
communities
and
push
forward
to
a
world
where
all
peoples
needs
are
met
equally.
highest
attainable
standard
of
health
because
of
this
link:
they
are
often
valued
only
as
mothers,
making
them
more
vulnerable
to
human
rights
abuses,
as
they
are
valued
less
then
men.
Moreover,
their
reproductive
capacity
can
be
used
as
a
tool
for
abuses
ranging
from
domestic
violence
to
genocide.