Over the decades from 1900 to 1967 abortion was transformed from
an important female-centred form of fertility control into a
medical event, closely monitored by the State. This transition, the
author argues here, took place against a background of debate over
fertility control and its implications for women s maternal
role.
The book, originally published in 1988, suggests that the
inter-war years saw a crucial mapping of boundaries in the debates
over abortion. The distinction between methods of fertility control
used before and after conception was more sharply drawn. The
abortion law was difficult to enforce and in 1936 the Abortion Law
Reform Association was founded by feminists to call for safe legal
abortion as a woman s right.
Resort to criminal abortion continued in the post-war years and
the number of therapeutic abortions also began to increase. The
medical profession s attempt to create a distinction between worthy
medical and spurious social reasons for fertility control gave way
in the face of women s demands for safe and effective means to plan
when and if they would have children. After a hard-fought battle,
the abortion law was reformed in 1967. The abortion decision,
however, remained firmly in the hands of the medical
profession.
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