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Home > Socio-Cultural Discourse on Female Reproductive Rights A Case Study of Pothohar Village, District Attock

Socio-Cultural Discourse on Female Reproductive Rights A Case Study of Pothohar Village, District Attock

Thesis Info

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External Link

Author

Sultana, Aneela

Program

PhD

Institute

Quaid-I-Azam University

City

Islamabad

Province

Islamabad.

Country

Pakistan

Thesis Completing Year

2017

Thesis Completion Status

Completed

Subject

Natural Sciences

Language

English

Link

http://prr.hec.gov.pk/jspui/bitstream/123456789/8041/1/Aneela_Sultana_Anthropology_HSR_2017_QAU_4.12.2017.pdf

Added

2021-02-17 19:49:13

Modified

2024-03-24 20:25:49

ARI ID

1676727179336

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This thesis mainly explores the association between the socio-cultural context and women‘s perception and practice of their reproductive rights. Meeting reproductive needs of rural women living in a traditional culture of Pakistan is no less than a challenge where sexuality is a taboo subject. There is little known about the sexual and reproductive practices and behaviour of women. The issues pertaining to female‘s reproductive rights remain unacknowledged at the policy level and lack implementation. Studies that were conducted In Pakistan before had mostly focused on the issues of maternal health from the service delivery aspect and very few attempts have been made to empirically assess linkages between socio-cultural factors and Reproductive Rights. In order to have a clear picture of the state of females reproductive rights, this study was conducted in village Choha Shah Ghareeb of District Attock, in the Province of Punjab with the prime objective to understand the perception and practices of reproductive rights among females of the reproductive age group (15-49 years). The study employed anthropological methods including participant observation, in-depth interviews, illness narratives to provide a comprehensive analysis of reproductive with an emic perspective. The study explored their participation in Fertility Decision Making and utilization of reproductive health services such as antenatal care, delivery and postnatal care. Furthermore, it investigated those traditional practices which affect female‘s reproductive rights such as early marriages, inability to access modern health care facilities, nutritional taboos, consequences of infertility, son preferences and unsafe induce abortion etc. The study elaborated key aspects linked to the notion of female sexuality and fertility. The findings show that socio-cultural norms inhibit discussion related to sexuality and reproductive health and young girls‘ receive little information about puberty prior to menarche which becomes the foundation for their incapacity to safeguard their future reproductive health. Marriage is considered a religious duty and an inevitable act. Field findings reflect the importance of marriage to protect the honor of women and also for the formation of a family unit. The right to marry and form a family was more recognized vii in terms of parental responsibility and obligation to arrange timely marriage of their children. Among married women interviewed in this study, 45% were asked to give their opinion in spouse selection and more than one third of respondents were married to their cousins. Women were also aware of their right to seek divorce yet the majority of them (47%) disagreed and urged the necessity to avoid dissolution of marriage due to the fear of social disgrace, family pressure, being separated from children and due to the limited opportunities to marry again. Sexuality for married women is an area of compromise, obligation, and lack of control. Sexual obedience is considered an essential characteristic of a good and successful wife. The majority of the respondents agreed that they would never like to refuse their husbands and perceived sex as a ‗wife‘s duty & religious obligation‖. Furthermore, good women are expected to be ignorant and passive in sexual matters and sexual subservience is used as a strategy to gain love and respect from their husbands and also to secure their present and future well-being. Women‘s understanding of their reproductive health comes from their socialization pattern, configuration of gender roles and sense of motherhood and identity based on their norms and traditions. Women placed safe motherhood as an important element of their expressed meaning of reproductive rights and strongly emphasized their right to have good reproductive health care particularly during pregnancy and post-partum period. But practically, the majority of them considered conception and the act of giving birth as ‗natural‘ and received antenatal care mostly in case having some health problem. There was a clear preference for home delivery and hospitals were chosen in case of emergency or health risk or in the absence of family member to assist home delivery. Women perceived childlessness as a curse because children strengthened the marital bond and raised their status in the family. Having a quick pregnancy meant compliance with social norms and family expectations. Successful childbearing gives them respect and decision making authority in reproductive matters. Women also discussed the deteriorating effect of excessive births for their reproductive health and the majority of viii them acknowledged their right to space births and determine family size. Many women mentioned their limited decision making authority with regards to keeping their family size smaller and also accepted the covert use of contraceptives and induced abortion without consent of their husbands in case of having closely spaced pregnancies, health concerns, or under extreme economic misery etc. The majority of women had knowledge of modern contraceptives and apart from them they also knew and practiced traditional methods such as withdrawal. Family planning methods and their perceived viability is at the heart of the discourse surrounding women‘s fertility control behavior. The findings demonstrate that women‘s lower social position and economic dependence on their husbands and families limit their ability to practice their reproductive rights by not allowing them to make independent decisions to regulate their reproductive lives. Fertility decisions are made and experienced within their cultural context whether it is early marriage, compulsory motherhood, home based delivery, lack of fertility control, closely spaced pregnancies, unsafe abortions or utilization of reproductive health care services. The study concludes that women situated their reproductive rights within the broader spectrum of their socio- economic, familial and cultural context. Having a good family life, securing social and economic protection and attaining social respect were key elements of the meaning of reproductive rights for them. Women, in the desire to keep their marriage successful or for the sake of their children, prefer to compromise for the sake of this affiliation, which ultimately provides them socio-economic and emotional support.
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مولاناشاہ حلیم عطا

مولانا شاہ حلیم عطا
دوسرا حادثہ دارالعلوم ندوۃ العلماء کے شیخ الحدیث مولانا شاہ حلیم عطا صاحب کی وفات ہے، وہ حضرت شاہ پیر محمد عطا سلونویؒ کی اولاد میں تھے اور موجودہ سجادہ نشین شاہ نعیم عطا صاحب کے چھوٹے بھائی تھے۔ یہ خاندان علم و فضل دونوں کا جامع رہا ہے۔ شاہ حلیم عطا صاحب بڑے وسیع النظر عالم اور اسلامی علوم کا زندہ کتب خانہ تھے۔ خصوصاً حدیث اور اس کے متعلقہ فنون پر ان کی نظراتنی گہری اور وسیع تھی کہ اس دور کے علماء میں اس کی مثالیں کم ملیں گی۔ حضرت الاستاذؒ فرمایا کرتے تھے کہ شاہ صاحب کے علم کی تھا نہیں ملتی اور اس علم و فضل کے ساتھ ایسے خاکسار اور متواضع، سادہ مزاج اور بھولے بھالے تھے کہ ان کو دیکھ کر کوئی شخص مشکل سے ان کے لکھے پڑھے ہونے کا گمان کرسکتا تھا۔ اپنے سے کمتر علم والوں کی باتیں اس شوق اور توجہ سے سنتے کہ معلوم ہوتا خود استفادہ کررہے ہیں۔ حافظہ حیرت انگیز تھا، کتابوں کے صفحے کے صفحے زبانی یاد تھے مگر ان کمالات کے ساتھ قوت گویائی اور قوت ِ تحریر نہ تھی، اس سے بھی زیادہ ان کی تواضع اور استغنانے ان کو نام و نمود سے بے نیاز کردیا تھا، اس لیے ایک محدود علمی حلقہ کے سوا علمی دنیا بھی ان کے کمالات سے واقف نہ ہوسکی، تقریباً پندرہ سال سے دارالعلوم ندوۃ العلماء میں حدیث نبوی کا درس دیتے تھے اور اسی مبارک شغل میں چند دنوں فالج میں مبتلا رہ کر انتقال کیا۔ انتقال کے وقت ۶۵ سال کی عمر رہی ہوگی۔ اﷲ تعالیٰ اس پیکر علم و اخلاق کو اس کے پاک شغل کے طفیل میں عالم آخرت کی سربلندی عطا فرمائے۔
(شاہ معین الدین ندوی، نومبر ۱۹۵۵ء)

مولانا شاہ حلیم...

حیل فقہ اسلامی كے تناظر میں

Abstract: Heela (-f*) is an Arabic word used as a term in Islamic Jurisprudence. In English language it can be explained "evasiveness" which can be interrupted in to ways as a person may understand something else than the meaning ofspeaker without labelling the lie. It demands wisdom and minuteness to be usedfor achieving the objectives. It legitimately lawful evasiveness and sinful evasiveness all two dimensions fit. The valid evasiveness fulfill all the legal requirements. It has further three types. Infirst type although evasiveness may be invalid but the achieved purpose must be lawful and valid. For example, a woman, who hasfiledfor divorcedfrom her husband can present before jury the fake witness, in order to achieve her purpose. In second type an evasiveness may be used as mean of profit or hurdlefrom getting a loss. It has the relation ofcause and effect. While in third type it has an element ofambiguity, which may be used to avoid the loss by misleading or giving false statement. Sinful evasiveness is the one which is used to achieve an illegal target. It is further divided into three types. In first type the evasiveness and the required purpose both stand illegal. In second type the evasiveness may be lawful but the targeted objective is unlawful. While in third type the evasiveness and the purpose both may be valid but these are manipulated to achieve an illegal purpose and objective.

Physiology of Wheat Triticum Aestivum L. Accessions and the Role of Phytohormones under Water Stress

The availability of soil moisture is the major factor limiting wheat production. Present study was aimed to determine the physiological response of local germplasm resources of wheat exposed to different periods of water stress and rewatring at booting and grainfilling stages. The response of four wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) accessions (011251, 011417, 011320 and 011393) to water stress and exogenously applied abscisic acid (ABA) was determined in a pot study. The experiment was conducted in the wire house of Quaid-i- Azam University, Islamabad during the wheat-growing season 2005 and 2006. Pre sowing seeds treatment with ABA was made for 8 h. Water stress was imposed by withholding water supply for a period of 9 d thereafter the plants were irrigated. The first water stress treatment was started at 50% booting and the second at 50 % grainfilling. Sampling was done after 3, 6 and 9 days of induction of water stress. Recovery was studied at 48 and 72 h of re-watering. Changes in the water status of leaves along with osmoregulation, activities of antioxidant enzymes, stomatal conductance, transpiration rate, pigment, phytohormones and protein contents were measured. Yield parameters were also determined. Moreover Random Amplification of Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis was done to determine the extent of genetic variability among the accessions and to evaluate the treatment induced changes in the protein profiling of grains Sodium Dodecyl Sulphate Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was done. Marked decreases in leaf water status, stomatal conductance, transpiration rate and contents of chlorophyll and carotenoid, Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), Gibberellins (GA) and trans zeatin riboside (t-zr.) were associated with an increase in the accumulation of ABA (both free and bound), sugar, proline, glycine betaine and activities of antioxidant enzymes (superoxide dismutase, peroxidase and catalase) under water stress. Increase in protein content under water stress remained a dominant response except for accession 011251. The inhibitory effects of water stress were ameliorated by exogenous application of ABA and this ameliorating effect was found to be more significant at booting stage as compared to grainfilling particularly in the accession 011320. Upon rewatering the recovery from water stress was found to be greater in case of ABA treated plants. Accession 011320 was found to be the most sensitive among all xivthe accessions showing higher decrease in yield which appears to be associated with less efficient ABA metabolism as evidenced by slow accumulation of stress-induced free ABA which did not return to the pre stress level but remained significantly higher on rewatering moreover the decrease in t-zr content was also higher. Whereas, accession 011417 was found to be highly tolerant to water stress possibly by economizing water status, efficient control on the accumulation of osmolytes, stomatal conductance and activities of antioxidant enzymes concomitant with higher ABA content and lesser decrease in indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), gibberellins (GA) and trans zeatin riboside (t-zr.) contents under stress. Higher rate of recovery upon rewatering was also found in this accession. Random amplification of Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis revealed a marked diversity among the four accessions and the Sodium Dodecyl Sulphate Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) protein profiling of the grains indicated that the changes in grain protein composition are mainly controlled by genetic factors. It is inferred from the results that adverse effects of water stress in wheat become more pronounced at grain filling as compared to booting. Proline, antioxidant enzymes, ABA and t-zr content can serve as physiological markers for selecting water stress tolerant wheat genotypes. ABA seed soaking can be implicated as an effective way to alleviate the adverse effects of water stress particularly in relatively sensitive wheat genotypes.