cial control it      fell out of fashion some time in the 1930's or 1940's. However, it has continued to the present in some form or      another. In the United States alone it is estimated that about ten thousand girls are at risk of this practice in      today's society. A bill was recently presented to the U.S. government in 1994 prohibiting female genital      mutilation to be performed, unless done for a medical reason by a trained professional. Although we are fighting      for preventative measures, this surgery is still routinely performed on women in the United States. Some doctors      believe and act upon the idea that excision does not prevent sexual pleasure but enhances it. FGM is also      entering the United States with some immigrants who are holding on to their customs and identity. On the United      States level, and in other places around the world, there are finally numerous efforts being made in order to      abolish this practice both locally and internationally. Many laws have been passed over the last decade, in the      United States and other Western countries, prohibiting any kind of mutilation on young girls, other than for      medical purposes. In the future, leaders are hoping to enforce these rules in other smaller countries, where the      government can do little to stop these unlawful acts, especially in Tribal peoples and other communities were      laws are not strictly enforced. ...