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11 votes
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The happiness curve: Why life starts looking up again at the age of 51
5 votes -
Critics call on Apple and Google to shut down Saudi app that can restrict women’s travel
6 votes -
Women's March in Malaysia to push for LGBTI rights
10 votes -
The fight for gender equality in big-wave surfing, one of the most dangerous sports on earth
5 votes -
Emmeline Pankhurst: The Suffragette who used militant tactics to win women the vote
7 votes -
A first: Women take the majority in Nevada Legislature and Colorado House
9 votes -
This business helped transform Miami into a national plastic surgery destination. Eight women died.
6 votes -
Women's marches across Australia focus on Aiia Maasarwe's alleged rape and murder
4 votes -
This is what Black burnout feels like
7 votes -
Two Indian women enter temple after centuries-long ban on women
7 votes -
Films with heroines make more money
11 votes -
Wall Street rule for the #metoo era: Avoid women at all cost
25 votes -
There are calls for several Icelandic MPs to resign after they were recorded using crude language to describe female colleagues and a disabled activist
13 votes -
'They ordered me to get an abortion': A Chinese woman's ordeal in Xinjiang
12 votes -
Manic pixie prostitute
9 votes -
How the women of The Expanse are expanding our worldview
16 votes -
Period-tracking apps are not for women
28 votes -
Indigenous women kept from seeing their newborn babies until agreeing to sterilization, says lawyer
22 votes -
Watching my son's traumatic birth drove me to a breakdown
6 votes -
Tallahassee yoga shooter was a far-right misogynist who railed against women and minorities online
14 votes -
An eight-year-old Australian girl has brought Kellogg's to its knees, forcing the cereal giant to promise it will put girls on its boxes of Nutri-Grain starting from next year.
8 votes -
A scary amount of LGBT women and non-binary folks report seeing a ghost
10 votes -
Google staff walk out over women's treatment
23 votes -
One country's plan to solve the world's hidden health crisis
5 votes -
Two unborn babies' spines repaired in womb in UK surgery first
6 votes -
One healthy diversity data point: research reports an uptick in women applying for IT jobs
4 votes -
'We need to know the sex. If it’s a girl we are going to terminate it'
25 votes -
I've been an ‘abortion doula’ 2,000 times
9 votes -
Unprotected: "An acclaimed American charity said it was saving some of the world’s most vulnerable girls from sexual exploitation. But from the very beginning, girls were being raped."
9 votes -
The 19th century best-selling author excluded by the Brazilian Academy of Letters
5 votes -
The fake abortion clinics of America: Misconception
12 votes -
Doctor Who: Fans hail Jodie Whittaker in female Doctor's first appearance
13 votes -
Abortion laws: Australian High Court prepares to hear challenge to picketing ban
7 votes -
Australian states and territories agree to axe 'tampon tax'
10 votes -
As Dolly Doctor, girls told me their secrets. Here's what I learnt
7 votes -
The epic rise and fall of the name Heather
9 votes -
Ireland plans to offer abortions for free, as ban is officially repealed
17 votes -
American woman pedals 184 mph, smashing record held by men for more than 100 years
18 votes -
No handmaids here! Australian Liberal women launch their red resistance
8 votes -
Riot Games says it wants to clean up its mess, but the people who made it are still there
17 votes -
'I just expected better': Reimagining a Muslim female superhero
10 votes -
Why I let my daughter wear makeup to school
13 votes -
The world's most common contraception has a dark past
7 votes -
The future abortionists of America
15 votes -
Why aren't IUDs used more for birth control?
11 votes -
Jehovah’s Witness girl could receive blood against her will during childbirth
8 votes -
Dressing up a Tudor lady
3 votes -
Victoria Woodhull: The first American woman to run for President — 150 years ago
10 votes -
After a year in Bangladesh camps, Rohingya women are finding their feet
Summary A look at the situation of Rohingya women living in Bangladeshi refugee camps, with a focus on health, medicine, and education. Extracts Before coming to a refugee camp in Cox's Bazar,...
Summary
A look at the situation of Rohingya women living in Bangladeshi refugee camps, with a focus on health, medicine, and education.
Extracts
Before coming to a refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Rashida had never seen a foreigner.
[...] the biggest shock she had was when a community health worker suspected Rashida was pregnant again and took her to the clinic for an examination.
"What I found out that day was that you can stop having babies if you want to," she says. "I had never heard of family planning."
Rashida has since thought hard and discussed this with her husband. Their shelter is cramped, and their future uncertain.
"Three children is a nice family size," she says. "After that, I don't want any more. What I want is to learn something. When we go back home I'd like to be able to work, not just look after children."
Bakoko [a midwife from Uganda] teaches new mothers how to wrap babies and put on nappies. She examines pregnant women to check for signs of eclampsia, the biggest threat to pregnant women's lives. And she teaches women to check for multiple pregnancies, and to care for women before and after they give birth. She has saved numerous lives.
Link
8 votes