New Internationalist - 11.2019 - 12.2019

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THE DEBATE

in the context of the unmet need for
employment, for just wages, for food, for
universal primary healthcare, and above
all for equity and justice.
What philanthro-capitalists who fund
population-control programmes, and
following them policymakers, do with
the fact of unmet need for contracep-
tion, is use it as an argument for intro-
ducing unsafe methods of contraception
that women often have no control over. It
is justification for the use of long-acting
contraceptives such as injectables and
implants. Given the fact that countries
like India do not offer screening and
monitoring, since the programmes are
target-driven, these add to the morbidity
load borne by poor women. We must also
remember that, driven by international
financial institutions, public health is
grossly neglected, and indeed collapsing.

SARA: My approach is profoundly
humanitarian, practical – and positive.
Of course, easy access to safe, modern
contraceptives shouldn’t be dependent
on mega-programmes but should be the
norm everywhere – just as food, educa-
tion, health, equality and justice should
be. Mohan’s view understandably reflects

aspects of India’s experience, but reach-
ing his ideal (similar to mine) requires
a radical rethink of economic priorities
and strategies everywhere. The ‘more
people consuming more stuff’ economic
paradigm is bust.
In The Positive Deviant, I use
I=PxHxAxT to frame a ‘Sustainability
To Do List’ where success requires con-
tributions to all elements from all coun-
tries. H means growing human and social
‘capital’ and I includes growing nature’s
capacity, so no shortage of jobs there!
I was a family-planning nurse and
have spent time in Bihar. All the women I
met wanted to time and space their preg-
nancies, not for children to labour in the
fields, but to lead larger lives. Population
Matters campaigns in richer countries
for every conception to be intended and
family size considered alongside respon-
sibilities to global sustainability. We work
with local partners to empower poorer
women to do the same, learning from
good practice in countries like Indonesia
and Thailand – including using existing
screening infrastructure (for example, for
cancer).
It is about choice. Choosing the well-
being of people and planet – together. O

YOUR VIEWS ON: CAN THE EUROPEAN UNION BE REFORMED?
Our readers respond to the debate in the last issue (NI 521). Submissions may be edited.
WHAT

DO YOU


THINK?
TELL US HERE:
[email protected]
We will print a selection of
your views in the next issue.

Margaret Thatcher turned against that neoliberal trading project, now known as the
EU, when she realized that it was, via the Social Chapter, ‘letting in socialism by the
back door’. Her hostility sowed the seeds for Brexit. The EU incensed the British Daily
Mail-reading Right with its ‘nanny state’ working-hours directives; stricter-than-US
environmental standards and (partial) opposition to GM; and ‘political correctness
gone mad’ rulings on LGBTQI and women’s equality and other human rights issues.
Lately, the EU has angered tech libertarians too as it has, unlike most governments,
got tough with all-powerful tech giants such as Google and Facebook and actually
fined them for their crimes and misdemeanours. Can the EU be reformed? With
progressive forces acting from within, it can be pulled into a more socially useful
direction. It is a union, a sum of its parts – and if those parts are progressive, socialist,
there is hope. The most ardent and effective anti-EU lobby, whatever some Lexiters
might like to fantasize, is now thoroughly dominated by the nationalist Far Right and
its elite puppeteers. The ‘sovereignty’ on offer is such a long way away from democracy
it’s become a sick joke. This is the political reality we are living in. I don’t think your
rather arcane debate really captured that.
AMY MCDONALD, LIVERPOOL

4646 NEW INTERNATIONALIST

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