Impensés de la Conférence du Caire

12 décembre 2024 (14h-17h)

Centre des colloques (Campus Condorcet)

Conférence modérée par Céline Miani (Universität Bielefeld) et Heini Väisänen (Ined)

PROGRAMME

What is sexual about sexual violence

Amneris Chaparro-Martínez  (UNAM)

Amneris Chaparro-Martínez is an associate researcher at the Centre for Research and Gender Studies at UNAM in Mexico City. She holds a PhD in Political Theory from the University of Essex. Her research areas include contemporary feminist theory, feminist epistemology and gender studies. She has published books and articles on the concept of dignity in feminist theory, sexual harassment, the #MeToo movement, epistemic injustices, gender and epistemology, and the political use of metaphors within feminist scholarship. She is part of the executive committee and founding member of The Latin American Interdisciplinary Gender Network. In 2023 she was awarded the Rice Fellowship to participate as a Visiting Professor at Yale University.

 

Increasing attention to Obstetric Violence: from social movements to international bodies

Patrizia  Quattrocchi (UNIUD)

 

Patrizia Quattrocchi is a Professor in cultural and medical anthropology at the University of Udine, Italy. Her research interests include reproductive health and policies, with a particular focus on the differing responses to the overmedicalisation of birth, depending on the context. She conducted ethnographic research on indigenous Lenca midwifery in Honduras (1998) and in Mayan communities in Mexico (2000–2009), out-of-hospital birth in Italy, Spain, and the Netherlands (2010–2015), and obstetric violence in Argentina (2016–2018). She was twice awarded a Marie Sklodowska Curie Grant by the European Union (7FP and Horizon2020). As a result of the second project, titled “Obstetric violence. A new goal for research, policies and human rights on childbirth”, she is the coordinator of the Platform of Obstetric Violence, and continues her research on the topic in Latin America and in Europe. A new project on obstetric violence has recently been funded by the Marie Sklodowska Curie Action programme (HORIZON-MSCA-2022-Staff Exchange, 2024-2027). As the coordinator of the project (International Platform on Obstetric Violence-IPOV-RESPECTFULCARE), Professor Quattrocchi led a large international partnership made up of 19 institutions from 6 European countries and 3 Latin American countries, and a team of 40 experts, including researchers, professors, health professionals and members of civil society organisations (https://respectfulcare.eu ). She is also the author of the study “Obstetric violence in the European Union: Situational analysis and policy recommendations”, funded by the European Commission (2024).

 

30 Years On: Progress and Challenges in Engaging Men and Boys in Gender Equality and Sexual & Reproductive Health

Giovanna Lauro (Equimondo)

Giovanna Lauro is the Deputy CEO of Equimundo. She has worked for almost two decades as a gender equality researcher and advocate. Her expertise centers on the promotion of adolescents’ sexual reproductive health and rights through gender-transformative approaches, as well as on engaging men and boys in gender-based violence prevention. Prior to joining Equimundo, Giovanna worked at the United Nations Foundation as Associate Director of the Women and Population Program, and researched harmful traditional practices amongst minority communities in several European countries at the University of Oxford, where she attained her doctorate in Political Science. Her previous degrees include a Master’s degree from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies with a focus on Public Health, and a BA from the University of Bologna. 

 

From Global Silence to Global Disparities: LGBTQ+ Reproductive Rights and Queer Reproductive Justice

Marcin Smietana (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice)

Marcin Smietana is a research fellow at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice and an affiliated lecturer at the University of Cambridge. He works at the intersection of the sociology and anthropology of reproduction as well as queer/LGBTQ+ studies. His research on queer kinships and LGBTQ+ families in the United Kingdom, United States and Spain has led him to research surrogacy and reproductive justice. As a result, he is currently working on gestational time assessment, abortion and childbirth care in the United Kingdom, as part of the ERC ‘PregDaT’ project at Ca’ Foscari University of Venice.  Marcin has worked as a research associate and senior research associate in the Reproductive Sociology Research Group (ReproSoc) at the University of Cambridge, a Marie Curie fellow at the University of California-Berkeley’s Department of Gender and Women’s Studies and a postdoc at Queen Mary University of London’s Remaking Fertility initiative, and he has been collaborating with the AFIN research group at the Autonomous University of Barcelona. This follows on from his PhD from the University of Barcelona, and his earlier undergraduate studies in sociology at the Jagiellonian University of Kraków in his native Poland.