All Stories

  1. Moral dilemmas and abortion decision-making: Lessons learnt from abortion research in England and Wales
  2. Internalised abortion stigma: Young women’s strategies of resistance and rejection
  3. What predicts non-use of intra-uterine contraception?
  4. Abortion Counselling in Britain: Understanding the Controversy
  5. Hormonal contraception and regulation of menstruation: a study of young women's attitudes towards ‘having a period’: Table 1
  6. “I think it depends on the body, with mine it didn't work”: explaining young women's contraceptive implant removal
  7. Young women's experiences of side-effects from contraceptive implants: a challenge to bodily control
  8. ‘I’m pregnant … what am I going to do?’ An examination of value judgements and moral frameworks in teenage pregnancy decision making
  9. Book Review: Surviving Teenage Motherhood: Myths and Realities
  10. Rewarding Responsibility? Long-Term Unemployed Men and the Welfare-to-Work Agenda
  11. Birth Control, Sex, and Marriage in Britain, 1918–1960 . By Kate Fisher. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006. Pp. viii+294. $90.00.
  12. Observing the implementation of a social experiment
  13. Young women, sexual behaviour and sexual decision making
  14. Hera Cook (2004), The Long Sexual Revolution: English Women, Sex, and Contraception 1800–1975, Oxford; Oxford University Press, 412 pp., £35 hbk, ISBN 0-19-925239-4
  15. Teenage pregnancy: the government's dilemma
  16. Women, Policy and Politics: the construction of policy problems