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Female Genital Mutilation


# 7647
Female Genital Mutilation
This paper discusses the continuing practice of female genital mutilation(FGM) in many third world countries.
3,050 words (approx. 12.2 pages) | 10 sources | MLA | 2002 United States


Paper Summary:

The writer gives a brief history of female genital mutilation (FGM) including the different types, the reasons behind this occurrence and why it continues today. The paper looks at FGM in Egypt and Kenya and the policies in each of these countries are outlined in detail. The author explains that in Egypt FGM began for religious reasons and despite many challenges to the validity of the Fatwa, or religious decree, continues to this day. According to the paper, the rate is smaller than in previous generations, but it still continues to pose a threat to the lives of young girls in the country. In the case of Kenya, it began as a rite of passage, which largely went unnoticed by the rest of the world until the early 1960s when Kenya wanted independence and suddenly found this practice under scrutiny by the rest of the western world. The paper also discusses the United Nations and World Agency positions on FGM in order to help understand what attempts are being made by the world community to try to stop this practice on the grounds that it is a violation of human rights.

From the Paper:

"Data from the Adolescence and Social Change in Egypt survey suggest significant recent change in both the prevalence and practices surrounding female circumcision. After apparently remaining constant and nearly universal for several decades, prevalence among contemporary teenage girls is predicted to be more than 10 percent less than for their mothers. Still, the level of circumcision among Egyptian girls is high. Our data do not allow us to pinpoint the onset of the decline, but they do suggest an increased momentum in the years following 1994. Without further measurement at later time points, we cannot be certain that uncircumcised girls in the ASCE sample will avoid circumcision in the future. However, analysis of girls' own attitudes toward the practice hint that increasing age brings greater independence of thought and diminished support for circumcision (Nawal, 1980)."

Cite this paper

APA Citation:

Female Genital Mutilation (2012, February 09). Retrieved February 09, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Term-Paper-Female-Genital-Mutilation/7647

MLA Citation:

"Female Genital Mutilation" 09 February 2012. Web. 09 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Term-Paper-Female-Genital-Mutilation/7647>




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Primo US
Publisher Since:
Jun 10, 2002
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