International Family Planning Perspectives
İÇİNDEKİLERTable of ContentsUpdate Articles Family Planning in Bamako, Mali Costs and Benefits of Implementing Family Planning Services at a Private Mining Company in Peru Use-Effectiveness Among Users Of the Symptothermal Method Of Family Planning Social and Psychological Aspects Of Tubal Ligation in Zaire: A Follow-Up Study of Acceptors Francine van de Walle and Mariam Maiga Karen G. Foreit, Delia Haustein, Max Winterhalter and Ernesto La Mata Robert T. Kambic, Ronald H. Gray, Richard St. Mart, Claude A. Lanctot and Mary C. Martin Jane T. Bertrand, Chibalonza Kashwantale, Djunghu Balowa, Nancy C. Baughman and Chirhamolekwa Chirwisa Comment South Asia's Future Population: Are There Really Grounds for Optimism? Richard Leete and Gavin Jones Books in Review The Population Wars Rodolfo A. Bulatao Digest Most Zimbabwean Men Approve of Family Planning After the First Birth Thai Children from Small Families Generally Attain More Education Paraguay DHS Reveals Moderately High Fertility and Low Child Mortality Early Marriage and Childbearing Remain Common in Developing World Corrections The wood fertility sculptures pictured on the cover are from Mali. The pregnant woman is of Dc origin; the photograph, courtesy of the Center for African Art, New York, is by ferry L. Thomp The mother and child is a Bamana figure, from the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of New York; it was photographed by Lee Boltin. NOTLARYayın bir derleme çalışması olduğu için yazar ismi olarak editör ismi verilmiştir. |