Studies in Comparative International Development is an interdisciplinary journal focusing on political, social, economic, and environmental change in various contexts.
This is a transformative journal, you may have access to funding.
In honor of the release of the "Politics, Power, and Inequality in Global Health" special issue, each article will be available for free from March 1st through April 1st!
We are pleased to announce a call for papers for a cross-journal collection on Development in support of the Sustainable Development Goal for Decent Work and Economic Growth (SDG 8).
All participating journals as well as already published papers can be found on the collections landing page here.
Deadline: March 31, 2023
The 1994 Cairo International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) defined reproductive health as a human right for the first time. This paradigm shift aimed to put an end to population control goals and targets, while placing women’s reproductive autonomy at the center of population and development policies. The widespread adoption of the ICPD around the world has been hailed as a victory for reproductive rights, yet some have argued that because it represents a necessary compromise between competing interests, it fails to live up to this designation.
Read a Q&A on reproductive justice with Tamara Kay, the Editor-in-Chief, and Anna Calasanti, the Managing Editor of Studies in Comparative International Development.
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