Ecuador: Criminalizing Abortion Affects Rights, Health
Greatest Harm for Indigenous, Afro-Descendent People Living in Poverty
![Feminist activists and pro-choice groups witness a debate at Ecuador’s National Assembly on Criminal Code reform, in which there was a possibility that legislators would approve the decriminalization of abortion in cases involving rape, in Quito, Ecuador, on January 3, 2019.](/sites/default/files/styles/square/public/media_2021/07/202106wrd_ecuador_abortion.jpg?h=56d0ca2e&itok=Sl6m7K8n)
Greatest Harm for Indigenous, Afro-Descendent People Living in Poverty
90th Pre-Session
Address Abuse of Child Athletes, LGBT Discrimination, Gender Gap
Costly, Abusive Approach Fails to Address System’s Flaws
Discrimination Harms Parents and Children
80th pre-session
90th Pre-Session
Twenty Rights Groups Call for Justice and Accountability
Government Should Promptly Adopt Strong Policy to Tackle Abuses against Students
Submission to the Committee on the Rights of the Child
81st Pre-Session
81st Pre-Session
Ending Military Use of Schools Protects Students, Teachers
President Suluhu Should Support Education of Pregnant Girls