Abstract

IntroductionAn assessment in 2019 by Family Planning 2020 of progress on rights-based family planning since 2012 highlighted the development of tools and guidelines that identify and explain rights in relation to family planning, promotion of rights-based approaches to programing, strengthened accountability, and measurement of rights-focused outcomes. The assessment was also forward-looking, asking what aspects of rights-based family planning still need attention moving from 2020 to 2030.MethodsThis paper draws on interviews with 23 key informants from governments, civil society, and youth focused organizations, implementing partners, and bi-lateral and multilateral organizations from Africa, Asia and the Pacific, Europe and North America, all working on family planning and engaged in various roles with the FP2020 partnership at global and national levels, along with documentation of FP2030 partnership plans. The interviews were conducted as part of the assessment and included questions to respondents for their recommendations on rights-based family planning moving towards 2030.ResultsRespondents agreed that rights should be at the center of the vision for family planning, with attention to rights literacy, accountability and equity, including adolescent and youth leadership. They noted the need for consistent political and financial support, and incorporating rights into result-based financing programming. While respondents noted the need for development and dissemination of practical tools and training materials, along with rights metrics and implementation research, they stressed the importance of focusing work on rights at the country level. Respondents also acknowledged that institutionalizing rights-based family planning will require enhanced commitment and funding from both donors and countries to ensure programming – and success – over the long term. Amplifying civil society and particularly adolescent and youth voices will be key to engaging governments to support both rights-based programming and provide funding. Review of initial planning under FP2030 related to each of the recommendations suggests that the new partnership is seeking to addressing each of them.DiscussionAs the family planning field looks beyond 2020 to 2030, this paper provides a roadmap for building on the gains made over the past decade to effectively tackle the challenges remaining to ensure that programming to achieve the vision of the FP2030 Partnership is rights-based.

Highlights

  • An assessment in 2019 by Family Planning 2020 of progress on rights-based family planning since 2012 highlighted the development of tools and guidelines that identify and explain rights in relation to family planning, promotion of rights-based approaches to programing, strengthened accountability, and measurement of rights-focused outcomes

  • The Family Planning 2020 (FP2020) Partnership con­ stituted to achieve the goal of the 2012 London Summit, composed of governments, civil society, multilateral orga­ nizations, donors, the private sector, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), with support from a secretariat, was challenged to ensure that human rights grounded in the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) framework were at the center of programming

  • In 2011, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) and the Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR) produced a briefing paper that highlighted human rights related to contraception[8] and UNFPA published its 2012–2020 family planning strategy that was underpinned by human rights.[9]

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Summary

Introduction

An assessment in 2019 by Family Planning 2020 of progress on rights-based family planning since 2012 highlighted the development of tools and guidelines that identify and explain rights in relation to family planning, promotion of rights-based approaches to programing, strengthened accountability, and measurement of rights-focused outcomes. The Family Planning 2020 (FP2020) Partnership con­ stituted to achieve the goal of the 2012 London Summit, composed of governments, civil society, multilateral orga­ nizations, donors, the private sector, and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), with support from a secretariat, was challenged to ensure that human rights grounded in the ICPD framework were at the center of programming. A 2019 assessment of the measures FP2020 and partners took to ensure the rights of women and girls to contraception after 2012 highlighted, among other actions, efforts undertaken to develop tools and guidelines that identify and explain rights in relation to family plan­ ning, to promote programming implemented through rights-based approaches, to strengthen accountability, and to measure outcomes from a rights lens.[5]. Building on the momentum on rights-based family planning over the past decade, what is needed to ensure rights under moving to 2030?

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