Abortion Rights, Reproductive Justice and the State

£39.99

Abortion Rights, Reproductive Justice and the State

International Perspectives

Regional / International studies Gender studies: women and girls Gender studies: men and boys Sociology Birth control, contraception, family planning Religion: general

Author: Keertana Kannabiran Tella

Dinosaur mascot

Language: English

Published by: Routledge India

Published on: 30 November 2022

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 720 Kb

ISBN: 9781000788228


Overview

This book looks at the trajectories of reproduction and abortion rights in diverse socio-cultural contexts in various countries, and the regional concerns which animate these discourses.

Historical and Comparative Analysis

Abortion as practice and rhetoric has historically drawn attention to the reproductive body in the public sphere. This book traces the continuities and discontinuities in the debates around abortion rights, and its relationship with the State, in different countries – US, Korea, China, Poland, Argentina, Ireland, India, Bangladesh, South Africa, and New Zealand. It presents a comparative analysis that is grounded thematically around issues of race, class, technology, politics, and law, through interactions with institutionalized religion and the state. Central to this endeavour is an understanding of feminist mobilization on issues of abortion rights, in different cultural-historical contexts and its implications for the articulation of reproductive justice. For instance, it looks at the specific and diverse ways in which religion and culture intersect with state practice and national identities; the emergence of social action, activism and mobilization; the international politics of population control; and the place of reproductive justice and feminist resistance in processes of democratization.

Target Audience

Lucid and topical, this book will be of interest to students and researchers of gender studies, sociology, political science, human rights, policy around reproductive and women’s rights, law, and reproductive justice.

Show moreShow less