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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Birth_control_in_Japan
rdfs:label
Birth control in Japan
rdfs:comment
Birth control in Japan has been available since at least the 17th century, and its evolution has been informed by political, social, and economic contexts. Prior to World War I common forms of birth control included abortion, infanticide, and condoms. Birth control as an oral contraceptive, while known in intellectual circles, was not widely circulated until the interwar period when the debate over birth control gained public support and momentum. However, it was the militarists, whose goal of achieving a strong population in order to establish Japan as an international power prevailed, as Japan prepared to enter World War II. The end of World War II, and Japan's subsequent demilitarization brought an emphasis on population reduction by the US-led occupation SCAP (Supreme Command for the A
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dbc:Birth_control_in_Japan
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dbr:Japan_Family_Planning_Association dbr:Maternalism dbr:Japanese_Communist_Party dbr:Sildenafil dbr:Benevolent_neutrality dbr:Freedom_and_People's_Rights_Movement dbr:Fukoku_kyōhei dbr:Abortion_in_Japan dbr:Emergency_contraceptive_pills dbr:Yamada_Waka dbr:Infanticide dbr:Eugenics dbr:Ie_(Japanese_family_system) dbc:Birth_control_in_Japan dbr:Meiji_Restoration dbr:Tokugawa_shogunate dbr:Ministry_of_Home_Affairs_(Japan) dbr:World_War_II dbr:House_of_Peers_(Japan) dbr:Sexually_transmitted_infection dbr:Oral_contraceptive_pill dbr:World_War_I dbr:Penal_Code_of_Japan dbr:Women_in_Japan dbr:Chūō_Kōron dbr:Kyuichi_Tokuda dbr:Ministry_of_Health,_Labour_and_Welfare_(Japan) dbr:Itō_Noe dbr:Government_of_Meiji_Japan dbr:Margaret_Sanger dbr:Ministry_of_Health,_Labour_and_Welfare dbr:Malthusianism dbr:Edo_period dbr:Birth_control dbr:Japan_during_World_War_I dbr:Matthew_C._Perry dbr:Bluestocking_(magazine) dbr:Good_Wife,_Wise_Mother dbr:Kaizō dbr:Gunboat_diplomacy
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n10:5wxzf wikidata:Q55647659
dbo:abstract
Birth control in Japan has been available since at least the 17th century, and its evolution has been informed by political, social, and economic contexts. Prior to World War I common forms of birth control included abortion, infanticide, and condoms. Birth control as an oral contraceptive, while known in intellectual circles, was not widely circulated until the interwar period when the debate over birth control gained public support and momentum. However, it was the militarists, whose goal of achieving a strong population in order to establish Japan as an international power prevailed, as Japan prepared to enter World War II. The end of World War II, and Japan's subsequent demilitarization brought an emphasis on population reduction by the US-led occupation SCAP (Supreme Command for the Allied Powers) who were fearful of a rise in communism or militarism which would create a threat to democracy and the "free-world." Today various types of birth control in Japan are available to women either in drugstores, online, or through visiting a clinic. About 80 percent of married women in Japan prefer condoms as their choice of birth control. Other forms of birth control such as the morning after pill are available only through visitation of a clinic and oral contraceptives, which were legalized in 1999, are not covered by Japanese health insurance. Emergency contraceptive pills were approved by the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan in 2011; they require a prescription from a doctor.
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