scholarly journals Endoscopist gender preference: a closer look and a nuanced approach needed

Author(s):  
Pascale Anglade ◽  
Sawsan Abdel-Razig
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Lubna Kamani ◽  
Nazish Butt ◽  
Farheen Taufiq ◽  
Ana Garcia de Paredes ◽  
Elizabeth Rajan

2012 ◽  
Vol 75 (4) ◽  
pp. AB364
Author(s):  
Sabeen Abid ◽  
Nandhakumar Kanagarajan ◽  
Scott Naples ◽  
Asyia S. Ahmad
Keyword(s):  

Midwifery ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 286-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
Navpreet Dhillon ◽  
Christine MacArthur

2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ignace Habimana Kabano ◽  
Annelet Broekhuis ◽  
Pieter Hooimeijer

In 2007 Rwanda launched a campaign to promote 3 children families and a program of community based health services to improve reproductive health. This paper argues that mixed gender offspring is still an important insurance for old age in Rwanda and that to arrive at the desired gender composition women might have to progress beyond parity 3. The analyses are twofold. The first is the parity progression desire given the gender of living children. The second is gender specific replacement intention following the loss of the last or only son or daughter. Using the Demographic and Health Surveys of 2000, 2005, and 2010, we show that child mortality does not lead to extra parity progression beyond three, while having single gender offspring does and even more so when this is the result of the loss of the last son or daughter.


2015 ◽  
Vol 59 (4) ◽  
pp. 575-598 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diederik F. Janssen

A scientific nomenclature oferotic age preferencesinformed the mid- through late nineteenth century joint appearance of homosexuality and sexual abuse of minors on the medico-legal scene. Yet, even in the twenty-first century, legal, psychiatric and culture-critical dimensions of related terms are rarely cleanly distinguished. Review of primary sources shows the ongoing Western suspension of notions of ‘sick desire’, alongside and beyond the medicalisation of homosexuality, between metaphor, legal interdiction and postulated psychopathology. Virtually all early attention to erotic age preference occurred in the context of emergent attention to erotic gender preference. Age of attraction and age difference centrally animate modern homosexuality’s pre-modern past; its earliest psychiatric nomenclature and typologies (1844–69); its early aetiologies stipulating degrees of sexual differentiation (1890s); its concomitant sub-classification (1896–1914); its earliest psychophysiological tests (1950s); and, finally, its post-psychiatric, social scientific typologies (1980s). Several identifications of ‘paedophilia’ were seen throughout the 1890s but as a trope it gained cultural momentum only during, and as a seemingly intriguing corollary of, the progressive depsychiatricisation of homosexuality across the Anglo-European world (late 1950s through 1980s). Early twentieth century sources varied in having it denote (1) a distinct perversion, thus possible ‘complication’ of sexual inversion (2) a discrete corollary of psychosexual differentiation akin to gender preference (3) a distinct subtype of fetishism, thus a likely imprint of early seduction (4) a more intricate expression of erotic symbolism or psychosexual complex or (5) a taste answering to culture, a lack of it, or a libertine disregard for it.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document