Reproduction, Globalization, and the State: New Theoretical and Ethnographic Perspectives
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- introduction Toward Global Anthropological Studies of Reproduction: Concepts, Methods, Theoretical Approaches -- Introduction to Part I -- 1. Global Ethnography: Problems of Theory and Method -- 2. Globalizing, Reproducing, and Civilizing Rural Subjects: Population Control Policy and Constructions of Rural Identity in China -- 3. Planning Men Out of Family Planning: A Case Study from Mexico -- 4. Antiviral but Pronatal? arvs and Reproductive Health: The View from a South African Township -- 5. Birth in the Age of aids: Local Responses to Global Policies and Technologies in South India -- 6. Competing Globalizing Influences on Local Muslim Women's Reproductive Health and Human Rights in Sudan: Women's Rights, International Feminism, and Islamism -- Introduction to Part II -- 7. Reproductive Viability and the State: Embryonic Stem Cell Research in India -- 8. Globalization and Gametes: Islam, Assisted Reproductive Technologies, and the Middle Eastern State -- 9. Law, Technology, and Gender Relations: Following the Path of DNA Paternity Tests in Brazil -- Introduction to Part III -- 10. From Sex Workers to Tourism Workers: A Structural Approach to Male Sexual Labor in Dominican Tourism Areas -- 11. Family Reunification Ideals and the Practice of Transnational Reproductive Life among Africans in Europe -- 12. Problematizing Polygamy, Managing Maternity: The Intersections of Global, State, and Family Politics in the Lives of West African Migrant Women in France -- 13. Lost in Translation: Lessons from California on the Implementation of State-Mandated Fetal Diagnosis in the Context of Globalization -- 14. Reproductive Rights in No-Woman's-Land: Politics and Humanitarian Assistance -- Epilogue The Mystery Child and the Politics of Reproduction: Between National Imaginaries and Transnational Confrontations -- References -- Contributors -- Index