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8 Billion Lives, Infinite Possibilities: DC Launch of the 2023 UNFPA SWOP Report

澳门六合彩鈥檚 Maternal Health Initiative and UNFPA hosted a panel discussion of global experts and contributors to the UNFPA State of the World Population 2023 report. The panelists presented research based on evidence, discussed their advocacy efforts, and initiated a dialogue about how to practically implement the recommendations of the report in healthcare systems across the world.

Date & Time

Wednesday
Apr. 26, 2023
9:30am聽鈥撀10:45am ET

Location

Online Only

Overview

The 2023 State of the World Population (SWOP) Report offers a chance to reflect on what鈥檚 at stake in debates over global population. 鈥淭he question is not whether the human population is too large or too small. The question is whether everyone can exercise their fundamental human right to choose the number and spacing of their children,鈥 said Sarah Craven, Chief of the Washington Office of UNFPA at the virtual D.C. launch of the report at 澳门六合彩 on April 26, 2023. 聽

Dr. Atul Gawande, Assistant Administrator for Global Health at , observed that the new report comes at a moment when global population has reached a new landmark: 鈥淲e are now a world of 8 billion people, and that is the result of a milestone in global development over the course of the last century. Human life expectancy has doubled. This is a massive achievement brought about by science, innovation, behavior change, and more.鈥

The Population Paradox

U.S. Representative Chrissy Houlahan (PA-6) observed that reaching this 8-billion-person milestone has prompted governments and the media to express anxiety and concern about population dynamics in both directions. What impact does ? Yet she also cited concerns that declining birth rates and their effect on economies have led others to fear societal collapse.

What these debates have in common, however, is an insistence on controlling women鈥檚 reproductive rights: 鈥淚t seems as though no matter what women do, our reproductive choices are blamed for society鈥檚 ills,鈥 said Rep. Houlahan. 鈥淲e, as a global community, need to make sure that we鈥檙e affirming for all that reproductive rights is not鈥攁nd should not be鈥攁 political 鈥榟ot potato鈥 to use to score points against opponents, or鈥 tool to continue to discriminate against 51 percent of the world鈥檚 population.鈥

The SWOP report challenges the idea of either 鈥渢oo many鈥 or 鈥渢oo few鈥 human beings, and instead calls for a radical rethinking of how we frame population numbers. 鈥淚t emphasizes that with population, the point is not to dictate population size or composition, but rather to refocus on how people are living their lives,鈥 said Jennifer Sciubba, a Wilson Center Fellow who moderated the panel.

鈥淧opulation is ultimately about people,鈥 said Sarah Barnes, Project Director of the Maternal Health Initiative. 鈥淲hether we are talking about fertility, migration, or mortality trends, we are talking about people. This report seizes the opportunity to change the population narrative to be one centered on the choices and rights of the world鈥檚 8 billion and counting.鈥

Media and Language in Population Discourse

Sciubba noted that 鈥渁t best, the rhetoric on population is stale and repetitive. At worst, it is filled with alarm and anxiety.鈥 The genuine dangers associated with this type of alarmism are clear. It diverts attention away from serious problems that are solvable in favor of pointing attention to solutions that often limit the rights and choices of citizens.

While the media cannot tell people what to think, it can shape what people think about, so it is important to frame coverage carefully. 鈥淣arrative is so central to bringing the facts to life, to giving those facts meaning, and to creating a climate within which people then take action,鈥 said Eliza Anyangwe, Editor of the CNN series As Equals. She added that the SWOP report does a good job in making complex discussions of population accessible to readers, and successfully centers population discourse on people rather than numbers.

The need for better framing of key population issues is essential. Anyangwe noted that policy is often created without considering the perspectives of those who are affected, particularly the 鈥渨omb owner.鈥 And 鈥攁nd have been shown to violate human rights.

Anyangwe added that governments also are often insincere when introducing 鈥渇eminist鈥 foreign policies while simultaneously leveraging immigration or conservation as a means to control the rights and choices of people in their own and in other countries. 鈥淧erhaps a feminist response is to not make the womb the sight of these sorts of policy discussions,鈥 she stated, 鈥渧ery much as the report is suggesting.鈥

Empowering the Future: Gender Equality Fuels Demographic Resilience

In his remarks, Stuart Gietel-Basten, professor of social sciences at Khalifa University, observed that during the 1994 , there was a shift towards empowering people instead of setting population targets.

鈥淏ut, of course, everything has changed, and everything has stayed the same since 1994,鈥 he continued. A new world of low fertility, pronatalism, and reactions to a rolling back of sexual and reproductive rights hold sway in many parts of the world, so it was necessary to restate these empowerment objectives in the new SWOP report.

Better defining universal population challenges is essential. 鈥淎 lot of these challenges are defined by shaky science,鈥 said Gietel-Basten. 鈥淎t worst, these challenges are defined by prejudice, by racism, by sexism, by xenophobia.鈥澛犅

Lori Adelman, Vice President, Global Connect at Planned Parenthood Global, noted that the most recent data from 68 countries showed that an estimated 44 percent of partnered women are unable to make decisions over health care, sex, or contraception use. 鈥淲ithin that 44 percent, we know that ,鈥 she said.

Once again, pernicious framing is setting both policy and perception. 鈥淲hen we hear the narrative that women are having too many children,鈥 continued Adelman, 鈥渢hese women are usually poor and of color. Period. When we hear the narrative that women are not having enough children, these women are usually wealthy and white. These are the factors in our current scenario. It is driven by racism, and to not name that is harmful.鈥

The size of the global population has sparked concerns about issues that range from climate change and pandemics to economic uncertainty and conflict. But the 2023 SWOP report highlights the importance of understanding that human reproduction is neither the root cause nor the sole solution to any of the issues. And advancing gender equality is an often-overlooked solution to many of these same concerns.

鈥淚f we鈥檙e really truly concerned about things like economic stability,鈥 asked Rep. Houlahan, 鈥渢hen why are we ignoring studies that consistently show that regions where women are economically empowered are regions where there is greater community safety and longer and more durable peace times?鈥

The report also emphasizes the need to move towards an approach centered on choices and rights and highlights the ability of a system to adapt and thrive amid demographic changes, said Barnes.聽

Humanity鈥檚 way forward must be defined by demographic resilience, not demographic control. The evidence is clear. 鈥淲hen people are healthy, educated, and able to exercise their rights, individuals and societies flourish,鈥 said Craven. 鈥淩especting and upholding the rights, dignity, and equal value of all people can unlock a future of infinite possibilities.鈥

Written by Maanasa Chitti, edited by Richard Byrne.聽

Opening Remarks

Rep. Houlahan Headshot

Representative Chrissy Houlahan

U.S. House of Representatives (Pennsylvania, 6th Congressional District)聽
Atul Gawande Headshot

Dr. Atul Gawande

Assistant Administrator for Global Health, USAID
Sarah Craven Headshot

Sarah Craven

Director, North American Representation Office, United Nations Population Fund

Panelists

Lori Adelman Headshot

Lori Adelman

Vice President, Global Connect at Planned Parenthood Global
Eliza Anyangwe Unedited

Eliza Anyangwe

Editor, CNN As Equals
Prof Stuart Headshot

Prof. Stuart Gietel-Basten

Professor, Social Science, Khalifa University

Hosted By

Maternal Health Initiative

澳门六合彩鈥檚 Maternal Health Initiative (MHI) is dedicated to improving the lives of women, adolescents, and children around the world. MHI convenes experts from around the world to discuss solutions to end preventable maternal and newborn deaths and to navigate gender-based global health issues and their links to foreign policy. MHI explores a wide range of policy-related topics, including gender equity, global health, health care workforce and systems, caregiving, gender-based violence, workforce participation, girls鈥 education, and sexual and reproductive health and rights. MHI is globally focused with additional attention to women and girls living in humanitarian settings.  Read more

Environmental Change and Security Program

The Environmental Change and Security Program (ECSP) explores the connections between environmental change, health, and population dynamics and their links to conflict, human insecurity, and foreign policy.  Read more

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