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12 votes
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Stop telling women to fix sexist workplaces
15 votes -
In China, a school trains boys to be ‘real men’
12 votes -
Indonesian policewomen measured through 'purity and beauty', subjected to virginity testing
13 votes -
'We need to know the sex. If it’s a girl we are going to terminate it'
25 votes -
Winners give more as America loses out
4 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 -
Growing-ups: Living with your parents, single and with no clear career. Is this a failure to grow up or a whole new stage of life?
29 votes -
When couple took wife's surname it was 'not a big deal' and yet the practice remains an oddity
16 votes -
Women ask for raises as often as men, but are less likely to get them
9 votes