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Marina Lacroix

China launches sex education campaign-China-World-The Times of India - 0 views

  • China launched a national sex education campaign on Sunday in order to break traditional taboos and encourage people suffering from A couple at a kissing contest in Hefei, central China. (Agencies Photo) sexually transmitted diseases and infertility to seek medical help.
  • The new campaign for safe sex has been named as "The sunshine project to care for gender health". It involves use of posters and holding competitions besides sponsoring an international sex toy fair in Beijing, organisers said. The idea is to get people to discuss “painful topics" concerning their sexual life. The government recently intensified a television campaign to promote condom use, which is significant in a country where talking about sex is problematic for many people.
  • Officials bemoaned the fact that more than one-third of those suffering from sex related problems never seek medical help. Only seven percent of women and slightly more than eight percent of men seek immediate medical help for sexual problems while a lot of others take a lot of time before deciding to visit hospitals
Marina Lacroix

Homo zijn in...? - 0 views

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    Er wordt overal ter wereld nogal verschillend over homoseksualiteit gedacht. Metropolis vraagt zich daarom af: Hoe is het om homo te zijn in landen als Amerika, Zambia of China? Van het ooit zo conservatieve Spanje waar homo's tegenwoordig ook gewoon kunnen trouwen, tot een land als Zambia waar er nog altijd een groot taboe op homo-zijn heerst. Metropolis is hét buitenlandprogramma van Nederland 3. De basis vormt een wereldwijd netwerk van jonge, lokale filmmakers die hun omgeving door en door kennen. Door hun ogen kijkt Metropolis mee naar hun wereld, elke week rond één wereldwijd thema.
Marina Lacroix

De wereld over seks - 0 views

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    VPRO Metropolis - fragmenten uit China, Brazilië, Nicaragua, VS, en meer over jongeren en seks.
Marina Lacroix

BBC NEWS | Asia-Pacific | Aids is China's deadliest disease - 0 views

  • Chinese officials have said that HIV/Aids was the leading cause of death last year, compared with other infectious diseases.
  • Initially it was concentrated in high-risk populations, injecting drug users in particular.
  • But now the main cause of transmission is thought to be unsafe sex.
Marina Lacroix

South Korea, Where Boys Were Kings, Revalues Its Girls - New York Times - 0 views

  • According to a study released by the World Bank in October, South Korea is the first of several Asian countries with large sex imbalances at birth to reverse the trend, moving toward greater parity between the sexes. Last year, the ratio was 107.4 boys born for every 100 girls, still above what is considered normal, but down from a peak of 116.5 boys born for every 100 girls in 1990.
  • The most important factor in changing attitudes toward girls was the radical shift in the country’s economy that opened the doors to women in the work force as never before and dismantled long-held traditions, which so devalued daughters that mothers would often apologize for giving birth to a girl.
  • The government also played a small role starting in the 1970s. After growing alarmed by the rise in sex-preference abortions, leaders mounted campaigns to change people’s attitudes, including one that featured the popular slogan “One daughter raised well is worth 10 sons!”
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  • In 1987, the government banned doctors from revealing the sex of a fetus before birth. But experts say enforcement was lax because officials feared too many doctors would be caught.
  • In China in 2005, the ratio was 120 boys born for every 100 girls, according to the United Nations Population Fund. Vietnam reported a ratio of 110 boys to 100 girls last year. And although India recorded about 108 boys for every 100 girls in 2001
  • The Population Fund warned in an October report that the rampant tinkering with nature’s probabilities in Asia could eventually lead to increased sexual violence and trafficking of women as a generation of boys finds marriage prospects severely limited
  • “When I first joined the company in 1995, a woman was expected to quit her job once she got married; we called it a ‘resignation on a company suggestion,’” she said. Now, she said, many women stay after marriage and take a three-month break after giving birth before returning to work. “If someone suggests that a woman should quit after marriage, female workers in my company will take it as an insult and say so,” Ms. Shin said.
  • In 1990, the law guaranteeing men their family’s inheritance — a cornerstone of the Confucian system — was the first of the so-called family laws to fall; the rest would be dismantled over the next 15 years.
  • And last year, a study by the Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs showed that of 5,400 married South Korean women younger than 45 who were surveyed, only 10 percent said they felt that they must have a son. That was down from 40 percent in 1991.
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