In this highly-praised analysis of the controversial pro-choice
movement, Suzanne Staggenborg traces the development of the
movement from its origins through the 1980s. She shows how a small
group of activists were able to build on the momentum created by
other social movements of the 1960s to win their cause--the
legalization of abortion in 1973--and argues that professional
leadership and formal organizational structures, together with
threats from the anti-abortion movement and grass-roots support,
enabled the pro-choice movement to remain an active force even
after their primary goal had been achieved.
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