At the beginning of November, Family Planning brought together its 76 departmental branches in congress in Saint-Étienne, in the Loire, to define its orientations for the next two years.
"
The congress was an opportunity to affirm the need for international action driven by decolonial thinking, in accordance with the values of our movement
," reads its press release.
Spearheading the battle for the legalization of contraception and abortion when it was created in 1960, Planning now claims “intersectional feminism”.
“
That is to say, it takes into account the multiple relationships of domination experienced by people
“, obligingly explain its leaders.
This involves, among other things, the promise of “better inclusion” of “veiled or veiled women”.
The Saint-Étienne congress formalizes a turning point that began several years ago but remained unknown to the general public until 2019. That year, the Planning de Grenoble took up the cause...
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