| Abstract | 
            This report reflects the preliminary findings of an ongoing collaborative  project to investigate the impact of trade liberalisation on reproductive health  rights. The project is being undertaken simultaneously by researchers at the  School of Development Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal in South  Africa and by researchers from the International Center for Research on  Women (ICRW)-India. In response to the growing international attention  given to free trade, trade related intellectual property rights (TRIPS) and the  accessibility of essential drugs and medicines, the project aims to examine  the links between trade policy and reproductive health commodities. In  South Africa, the project focuses on the availability and use of emergency  contraception pills (ECPs). Emergency contraception (EC) has been  recognised both internationally and locally as being an important commodity  with respect to the realisation of reproductive health rights.  |