Inicio > Otras especialidades > La mutilación genital femenina en oriente y occidente > Página 6

La mutilación genital femenina en oriente y occidente

es/ssi/violenciaGenero/publicaciones/estudiosinvestigaciones/Estudios_Investigaciones/MGF.htm. Accessed 2/11/2015, 2015.

5. Gobierno de Aragón. Protocolo para la prevención y actuación ante la mutilación genital femenina en Aragón. 2016.

6. Sylla A. Nosotros ante la ablación del clítoris. 2006 1 julio 2006;2. Repaso.
Creían que la parte femenina del alma de un hombre residía en el prepucio. Del mismo modo, la parte masculina del alma de una mujer se situaba en el clítoris y en los labios.(7) 18

7. Johnsdotter S. Projected Cultural Histories of the Cutting of Female Genitalia: A Poor Reflection as in a Mirror. History & Anthropology 2012 -;23(1):91.

8. CUNHA MI. Género, cultura e justiça: A propósito dos cortes genitais femininos. Analise Social 2013 -;48(209):834.

9. Rasheed SM, Abd-Ellah AH, Yousef FM. Female genital mutilation in Upper Egypt in the new millennium. International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics 2011 7;114(1):47-50

10. Jirovsky E. Views of women and men in Bobo-Dioulasso, Burkina Faso, on three forms of female genital modification. Reprod Health Matters 2010 -;18(35):84.

11. Yirga WS, Kassa NA, Gebremichael MW, Aro AR. Female genital mutilation: prevalence, perceptions and effect on women’s health in Kersa district of Ethiopia. Int J Womens Health 2012;4:45-54

12. Kaplan A, Cham B, Njie LA, Seixas A, Blanco S, Utzet M. Female genital mutilation/cutting: the secret world of women as seen by men. Obstet Gynecol Int 2013;2013:643780.

13. Van Rossem R, Gage AJ. The effects of female genital mutilation on the onset of sexual activity and marriage in Guinea. Arch Sex Behav 2009 -;38(2):178.

14. Hayford SR, Trinitapoli J. Religious Differences in Female Genital Cutting: A Case Study from Burkina Faso. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 2011 -;50(2):252.

15. Sauer PJJ, Neubauer D. Female genital mutilation: a hidden epidemic (statement from the European Academy of Paediatrics). Eur J Pediatr 2014 -;173(2):237.

16. Toll H. Art Therapy and the Female African Diaspora’s Experience of Female Genital Cutting. 2012.

17. Sipsma HL, Chen PG, Bradley EH, Ofori-Atta A, Ilozumba UO, Karfo K. Female genital cutting: Current practices and beliefs in western Africa. Bull World Health Organ 2012 -;90(2):120

18. World Health Organization. A Systematic Review of the Health Complications of Female Genital Mutilation including Sequelae in Childbirth. 2000.

19. Scorgie F, Beksinska M, Chersich M, Kunene B, Hilber AM, Smit J. ‘Cutting for love’: genital incisions to enhance sexual desirability and commitment in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Reprod Health Matters 2010 -;18(35):64.

20. Darby R, J. Steven Svoboda. A Rose by Any Other Name? Rethinking the Similarities and Differences between Male and Female Genital Cutting. Med Anthropol Q 2007 -;21(3):301

21. Studd J. A comparison of 19th century and current attitudes to female sexuality. Gynecological Endocrinology 2007 -;23(12):673.

22. Rodriguez SW. Rethinking the history of female circumcision and clitoridectomy: American medicine and female sexuality in the late nineteenth century. J Hist Med Allied Sci 2008 -;63(3):323.

23. Pauls EP. Female genital cutting (FGC). Encyclopædia Britannica 2014 September.

24. Vissandjee B, Denetto S, Migliardi P, Proctor J. Female Genital Cutting (FGC) and the ethics of care: community engagement and cultural sensitivity at the interface of migration experiences. BMC Int Health Hum Rights 2014 Apr 24;14:13-698X-14-13.

25. Kelly B, Foster C. Should female genital cosmetic surgery and genital piercing be regarded ethically and legally as female genital mutilation? BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology 2012;119(4):389-392.