USA

Women's Rights Face Daunting New Year Worldwide, Activists Warn

FILE - Opponents and supporters of Planned Parenthood demonstrate in Philadelphia, July 28, 2015.

Women's rights face enormous challenges worldwide in 2017, according to activists, who expect fights to keep health clinics open, to save programs preventing unwanted pregnancies and to enforce laws protecting women from violence.

Globally, women's rights are in the crosshairs of rising isolationism and right-wing politics in Western Europe and the United States, where President-elect Donald Trump has promised to unravel an array of policies.

"There are major challenges facing women's rights coming up, not the least of which is a global cultural understanding ... that women are, in essence, second-class citizens," said Tarah Demant of Amnesty International USA.

"This is a global phenomenon," said Demant, senior director of Amnesty's identity and discrimination unit. "We are really worried."

Here are what activists see as some of the biggest challenges to women's rights in 2017:

FILE - A community health worker holds up contraceptives during a lecture on family planning at a reproductive health clinic run by an NGO in Tondo city, Manila, Jan. 12, 2016.

Global access to abortion, contraception

A threat to abortion access is the likely reinstatement of the so-called global gag rule under the Trump administration.

First imposed under former President Ronald Reagan, the rule prohibits groups getting U.S. aid abroad from providing abortions or counseling patients about abortions, even if their funds for those activities come from other sources.

The rule was lifted by President Barack Obama in 2009, but can be reinstated with the stroke of a pen.

Under the gag rule, many groups turned down U.S. aid, leaving them short of money for health services from cancer screenings to flu shots, advocates say.

The United States also could pull funding from the United Nations Population Fund, which provides access to reproductive health services but does not fund or support abortion.

FILE - A woman protests against underage marriages in Lagos, Nigeria, July 20, 2013.

Keeping women's organizations operating globally

Women's groups work around the world on such issues as divorce rights, gender wage gaps and child marriage, often operating in hostile environments on shoestring budgets.

Several countries have enacted laws pressuring such groups by making them register as foreign agents if they get funding from international donors, said Janet Walsh, acting director of women's rights division at Human Rights Watch.

At the same time, funding from U.S. government sources is likely to shrink, she said.

"I'm afraid for those who take a stand for women's rights, that their security and their ability to register and operate as organizations will be undercut," she said.

FILE - A photo of Lucia Perez,16, who was raped and killed in Argentina, is projected on a building as women participate in a demonstration against gender violence in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Oct. 25, 2016.

Violence against women

One in three women has experienced physical or sexual violence, most commonly inflicted by a partner, statistics show.

An estimated one in five will become a victim of rape or attempted rape, according to the United Nations, and high rates of femicide and domestic abuse grip many countries.

"Violence against women is a human rights crisis. It is a health crisis. It is a cultural crisis," said Amnesty's Demant.

Loss of U.S. as leader in women's rights

The U.S. government has in recent years played a key role in promoting and supporting women's rights, especially helping draw up global development goals approved by the United Nations, one of which calls for gender equality by 2030.

"We fear a rollback on international agreements on women's rights and a rollback of commitments by governments on women's rights," said Francois Girard, president of the International Women's Health Coalition (IWHC).

The IWHC intends to press governments not to cave to U.S. pressure to backpedal on women's rights, a strategy used during the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush that also sought to undermine women's rights, she said.

"Governments didn't like to be bullied," she said.

FILE - Renee Bracey Sherman of Chicago, Illinois, celebrates at the Supreme Court in Washington, June 27, 2016, after the court struck down Texas' widely replicated regulation of abortion clinics.

Abortion rights in the U.S.

Anti-abortion advocates want to repeal Roe v. Wade, the 1972 Supreme Court decision making abortion legal.

Trump will have an opportunity to name one or more justices to the highest court and has vowed they will be abortion opponents.

In the meantime, state laws are chipping away at abortion rights.

Texas lawmakers approved a law requiring burial of aborted fetal tissue, a measure estimated to cost hundreds of dollars per procedure, and Ohio signed into law a ban on abortions after 20 weeks.

"The number of abortions never goes down very much, regardless of the law," said Terry O'Neill, president of the National Organization for Women. "What does go down is the safety and affordability of abortions."

FILE - A health care enrollment fair, co-sponsored by Planned Parenthood of Northern New England, is held in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Nov. 9, 2013.

Access to contraception in the U.S.

Trump has said he would appeal some or all of the Affordable Care Act, which has provided 25 million previously uninsured Americans with health coverage.

Known as Obamacare, it pays for most birth control methods for women.

"That funding, by enabling women to avoid unintended pregnancies, saves the federal government a ton of money that they would otherwise have to pay for medical care, pregnancy care, child care, etc.," said Ann Starrs, head of the Guttmacher Institute, a leading reproductive rights group.

Defunding of Planned Parenthood

Defunding Planned Parenthood, which runs about 650 women's health centers nationwide, was a battle cry of Trump during the presidential campaign and a favorite cause of Vice President-elect Mike Pence.

Planned Parenthood relies on public funding for at least half its revenue, much of it from the Medicaid health insurance program for the poor.

Congress also could stop funding Title X programs that provide family planning services to low-income women and from an array of teen pregnancy prevention programs.

"To eliminate them as a provider either through Medicaid or the Title X family planning programs would leave millions of people in this country without regular health care," said Gretchen Borchelt, vice president for reproductive rights and health at the National Women's Law Center.