Search results for "Abortion law"

showing 6 items of 6 documents

Knowledge, Awareness And Perceptions Of Females On Clandestine Abortion In Kintampo North Municipality, Ghana

2016

Clandestine Abortion will continue to be an integral part of human society as long as people continue to accept and engage in sexual activities without being prepared to give birth. Despite the risks (death and other health complication) involved in clandestine abortion, people continue to engage in the act. The central inquiry is; why do people continue to do clandestine abortions despite its associated risk? Do people have knowledge on abortion concerning its legalities and associated risks? This paper thus seeks to clarify the above questions by examining the knowledge, awareness and perceptions of females on abortion, with focus on clandestine abortion in the Kintampo North Municipality…

030219 obstetrics & reproductive medicinePovertyKnowledge awarenessmedia_common.quotation_subjectAbortionCriminologyAbortion law03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePolitical sciencePerceptionembryonic structures030212 general & internal medicinePublic educationHuman societySocial psychologyreproductive and urinary physiologymedia_commonEuropean Scientific Journal, ESJ
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Abortion in Latin America. More Than Criminalization, Not Yet Women’s Constitutional Right

2018

Latin America abortion law is often categorized as seriously restricted. And this is so, partially. Abortion is criminalized if it does not fit in the legal indications (e.g. health risk, rape) contemplated. These indications have not only been one of the most innovative areas to expand access to legal abortion in the region in the last years – including rulings of high courts – but they also question the typical classification of Latin America as an extremely legal constrained setting. In fact, if we look closely at the world legal map, we find that only two countries have absolutely ruled out the use of criminal law to deal with voluntary abortion (Canada and few jurisdictions in Australi…

Abortion lawLatin AmericansCriminalizationPolitical scienceLawCriminal lawDecriminalizationConstitutional rightAbortionHealth riskSSRN Electronic Journal
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Not So Much Societal: The Catholic Church in Poland as a Veto Player

2021

George Tsebelis distinguished two forms of veto players’ actions: institutional and partisan. In a democracy, the Church is not able to play either role because it is not an element of the state’s institutional structure. This was the source for Simon Fink’s proposal to look at the Church as a societal veto player (VP). The case of Poland shows, however, that such an approach becomes inadequate in numerous situations. The Church’s influence on political parties, and particularly the state’s institutions, may be exerted outside society. Performed on the basis of the existing literature and political debates conducted since 1989, the analysis of the social and political reality of Poland all…

Abortion lawSociology and Political ScienceState (polity)George (robot)Political sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectCatholic Church and Politics; veto player; Poland; abortion law; in vitro fertilizationVetoElement (criminal law)DemocracyLaw and economicsmedia_commonEast European Politics and Societies: and Cultures
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Constitutional developments in Latin American abortion law.

2016

Abstract For most of the 20th Century, restrictive abortion laws were in place in continental Latin America. In recent years, reforms have caused a liberalizing shift, supported by constitutional decisions of the countries’ high courts. The present article offers an overview of the turn toward more liberal rules and the resolution of abortion disputes by reference to national constitutions. For such purpose, the main legal changes of abortion laws in the last decade are first surveyed. Landmark decisions of the high courts of Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, and Mexico are then analyzed. It is shown that courts have accepted the need to balance interests and competing rights to ground less res…

BoliviaValue of LifeLatin AmericansHuman Rightsmedia_common.quotation_subjectArgentinaPrinciple of legalityAbortionColombiaPersonhood03 medical and health sciencesDignity0302 clinical medicinePregnancyMedicineHumans030212 general & internal medicineDeveloping CountriesMexicomedia_commonBalance (metaphysics)Jurisprudence030505 public healthbusiness.industryConstitution and BylawsPoliticsObstetrics and GynecologyAbortion InducedGeneral MedicineRight to lifeAbortion lawAbortion CriminalLawFemale0305 other medical sciencebusinessAutonomyInternational journal of gynaecology and obstetrics: the official organ of the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics
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Reproductive rights or duties? The rhetoric of division in social media debates on abortion law in Poland

2019

This study explores the argumentative schemas used in claimmaking and the rhetorical resources for stance-taking in the online abortion law debate in Poland in late 2016. It shows how these discursive devices were used to divide and discredit the opponent in the social media by two social movements: the Stop Abortion coalition of conservative and religious organizations that sponsored the legislative proposal to considerably restrict abortion, and the Save Women committee that stood behind the ‘black’ protests opposing the project. The textual material is drawn from social media profiles of the two movements following a week of intense street protests and publicity activities (19–26 October…

Cultural StudiesArgumentativeSociology and Political Sciencepro-choicerhetoricDiscourse analysismedia_common.quotation_subject050801 communication & media studies0508 media and communicationsArgumentPolitical scienceReproductive rights050602 political science & public administrationRhetorical questionSocial mediastancediscourse analysismedia_common05 social sciences0506 political scienceprotestAbortion lawpro-lifeLawargumentRhetoricSocial Movement Studies
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The Undesired Other

2019

Over the recent years, the theme of abortion has set in the agenda of many countries. Although the abortion law was already present in France, the US and the UK, in some other countries the law was recently sanctioned just after the 2000s. This chapter deals with the problem of hospitality in the days of terrorism. From different angles, this chapter explores the question of abortion and the ideas of hospitality and multiculturalism, points that modern terrorism has instilled as necessary debates. We hold the thesis that the modern self has serious problems to understand the alterity when it confronts the own desires. The right of legal abortion should be framed as a decline of hospitality,…

business.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectAlterityAbortionhumanitiesCulture of fearAbortion lawHospitalityMulticulturalismLawPolitical scienceTerrorismbusinesshealth care economics and organizationsmedia_commonTheme (narrative)
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