Journal Citation:
104 AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW PROCEEDINGS, 383-388 (2010)
This presentation discusses current efforts
to develop and enforce a human rights norm
with regards to preventable maternal death.
The author begins by presenting statistical
data regarding pregnancy-related deaths,
which shows that rates vary starkly with the
wealth of the country. Wealthy countries are
no longer as vulnerable to pregnancy-related
deaths as poor countries, which indicates
that dying during pregnancy is preventable.
The author argues that the continuation of
high maternal death rates is due to a failure
of government will. The author calls for the
creation and implementation of standards to
enforce government accountability in this
matter. The presentation concludes with a
discussion of some such standards that have
already been enforced in different parts of
the world.