…a girl/woman is taken by force or false promises and forced into prostitution, and when she is forced by circumstances, family or partner to seek income by selling her body….
…must be protected. The research showed quite clearly that if rape is a sensitive problem for everyone, it is often tolerated (and “undeclared”) and means, for example, that denunciation is…
…equality with, for example, the sexual division of labour, tend to perpetuate inequality in other areas. For example, a norm that will compensate domestic women for their various domestic tasks,…
…young women and adolescents, with serious infections due to illegal abortions. The surgical interventions that they had to undergo to save their lives often left them infertile and unable to…
…of the past that can still be observed today (and to some extent constitute a heritage), and to try to explain why tradition is kept and preserved. We saw that…
…to change discriminatory practices; we must go to the root of the problem and question patriarchal values. And why? To call into question the “eternal truths” that seek to explain…
…things, teaching and helping young people to have a responsible and gratifying sex life, where the right to pleasure is allied with respect for others and respect for one’s own…
…knowledge and establish friendly relationships that by their nature lead to adaptations to the family model. In other words, new standards of behaviour are ‘imposed’ and appropriated on top of…