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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
15 pages in length. There have been a number of benefits to come out of mandatory birth control in past history. In China, for example, not only has the nation's birth rate dropped significantly over the past decades, but its per capita income has experienced a monumental augmentation -- from 235 yuan back in the early 1970's to twenty-two hundred in 1995 -- that has yielded its people a much more advantageous existence. For Peru, the issue of overpopulation has come full circle to such an extreme that the nation's family planning organization thought it necessary to force sterilize myriad numbers of unwitting females; in many other cases, however, women were offered as much as fifty pounds of food for their consent. Is this practice one might consider unethical, or is it the only means by which a struggling society can even begin to come to grips with its massive overpopulation problem that family planning cannot control? Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCPeru.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
representative of Peruvian history, imposing restrictions that allow only a limited number of children per family -- otherwise leaving the parents to face tubal ligation without their knowledge or consent
-- has been looked upon as barbarous for a twenty-first century nation. Issues of hostility toward women and the overwhelming statistical evidence of overpopulation concerns have turned what once
might have been a reasonably good idea into one that carries with it significant drawbacks with regard to the natural rights of human life. Is sterilization the answer to
Perus overpopulation problem, or can people be relied upon to carry out family planning? Clearly, the government does not trust its citizens to know when to cease procreation, which
is why the Peruvian Ministry of Healths Family Planning Program has taken it upon itself to enact an immediate solution; despite the outright implications, it appears to have made quite
a dent in the problem. "In 1997, state doctors performed 110,000 tubal ligations - up from 30,000 the year before. Among them were some atypical candidates: women with
no children, 15-to-19-year-olds, and menopausal women, according to various inquiries."1 II. FROM THE FAMILYS PERSPECTIVE Mr. and Mrs. Rey, a recently
married couple, had dreamt of a large family ever since they began planning their future together, but they were particularly desirous of a baby girl as the first addition.
When it came time to actually create that family, they knew that if they did no abide by the family planning mandates, they would find themselves in a great deal
of trouble; after all, Peru already had far too many people to support on the plot of land upon which the nation stood. They did not want to give
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