Annual Reports
30 Faces of Roe
Abortion in Nepal: Women Imprisoned
An Unfulfilled Human Right: Family Planning in Guatemala
Beyond the Law: Justice and Gender in Latin America
Bodies on Trial: Reproductive Rights in Latin American Courts
Body and Soul: Forced Sterilization and Other Assaults on Roma Reproductive Freedom in Slovakia
Breaking the Silence: The Global Gag Rule's Impact on Unsafe Abortion
Breaking Through: A Guide to Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights
Bringing Rights to Bear: An Analysis of the Work of the UN Treaty Monitoring Bodies on Reproductive and Sexual Rights
Claiming Our Rights: Surviving Pregnancy and Childbirth in Mali
Failure to Deliver: Violations of Human Rights in Kenyan Health Facilities
Female Genital Mutilation: A Guide to Laws and Policies Worldwide
Female Genital Mutilation:A Matter of Human Rights, An Advocate's Guide to Action
Gaining Ground:A Tool for Advancing Reproductive Rights Law Reform
Imposing Misery
Legal Grounds: Reproductive and Sexual Rights in African Commonwealth Courts
Litigating Reproductive Rights: Using Public Interest Litigation and International Law to Promote Gender Justice in India
Paulina: Five Years Later
Persecuted: Political Process and Abortion Legislation in El Salvador
Removing Barriers Improving Choices: Health Svcs Managed Care
Reproductive Rights 2000: Moving Forward
Reproductive Rights are Human Rights
Roe v. Wade and the Right to Privacy
Silence and Complicity: Violence Against Women in Peruvian Public Health Facilities
State of Denial: Adolescent Reproductive Rights in Zimbabwe
Tipping the Scales
Women Behind Bars: Chile's Abortion Laws
Women of the World: Anglophone Africa
Women of the World: East and Southeast Asia
What If Roe Fell? The State-by-State Consequences of Overturning Roe v. Wade
What If Roe Fell? The State-by-State Consequences of Overturning Roe v. Wade (2nd edition)
Women of the World: East Central Europe
Women of the World: Francophone Africa
Women of the World: Formal Laws and Policies Affecting Their Reproductive Lives
Women of the World: Latin America and the Caribbean
Women of the World: South Asia
print this page | email this page | join mailing list
Women of the World: Laws and Policies Affecting Their Reproductive Lives

Francophone Africa

PRICE: $20
PAGES: 201
LANGUAGES: English and French
ITEM: RWOW03
©2000 English



Read the report online (PDF).

To order, visit our online bookstore or call 917-637-3600 and ask for publications. Email publications@reprorights.org.

Women of the World: Laws and Policies Affecting Their Reproductive Lives - Francophone Africa, is the result of an in-depth examination of the laws and policies affecting women's reproductive health and rights in seven countries of Francophone Africa: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, Mali, and Senegal.

The report makes clear that although these countries have adopted policies to address many of the reproductive health problems common to the region, including high levels of maternal and infant mortality and high prevalence rates of HIV/AIDS, these policies have not had the desired effect. Women continue to suffer in the face of discriminatory customary laws and practices that undermine their social and economic autonomy. It is recommended that governments should resolve the contradictions between customary laws and statutory laws, and between laws and policies. In the absence of a commitment on the part of national governments to resolve these contradictions or to ensure that those laws already in place are respected and applied, women will continue to face discrimination in those areas that most directly affect their public and private lives.

Key Findings of the Report:

  • Governments of the seven countries presented in the report, although willing to adopt at least some types of reproductive health policies and programs, lack the political will to promote related rights;

  • Those rights that have been granted to women, by both domestic legislation and international legal instruments ratified by many governments, are still mere formalities;

  • Customary laws, which often have the force of law under the Constitution, undermine women's rights and are often a source of discrimination in areas that are important for women's rights, such as marriage, divorce, child custody, and inheritance;

  • Contradictions persist between laws and policies. In Burkina Faso, for example, although the provision of information on contraception is no longer considered illegal since the adoption of the Family Planning Policy in 1986, the Penal Code still prohibits it;

  • Finally, there are tensions and disparities between modern statutory law and customary law in that customary law, which tends to be unfavorable to women, often contradicts modern law in the area of women's rights. Benin's customary law, for example, sets a lower age at first marriage than its civil law.
Related Links

  • See the Search by Region page for statistics on the individual countries in the report.
  • See the Reproductive Freedom News article on the report.

    Women of the World: Francophone Africa
    Electronic Edition



    Our books and reports are here for free as PDF files. To view PDF files, you will need Adobe Acrobat Reader, which can be downloaded for free by clicking here.