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Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12318729

ABSTRACT

PIP: Journalists who cover population issues search out information on official policies, demographic rates, scientific positions, and shocking trends. In the process, individuals vanish into the collective. A women's journalism project in Mexico, Women's Information and Communication Center (CIMAC), is endeavoring to change this pattern of reporting, especially in the area of reproductive rights. CIMAC journalists note that it is in discussion with individuals that the real effects of development policies can be understood, not through reliance on official statistics. In addition, CIMAC is stimulating public debate on issues such as the North American Free Trade Agreement, the effort toward decentralization through the creation of 100 new cities, labor migration, and environmental destruction. Another focus will be to large participants at the 1994 International Conferences on Population and Development to validate the rights of women.^ieng


Subject(s)
Communication , Mass Media , Public Policy , Reproductive Medicine , Women , Americas , Developing Countries , Health , International Agencies , Latin America , Mexico , North America , Organizations , Politics , Public Opinion , United Nations
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