Uneasy allies: pro‐choice physicians, feminist health activists and the struggle for abortion rights
- 20 September 2004
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Sociology of Health & Illness
- Vol. 26 (6) , 775-796
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0141-9889.2004.00418.x
Abstract
Abortion represents a particularly interesting subject for a social movements analysis of healthcare issues because of the involvement of both feminist pro-choice activists and a segment of the medical profession. Although both groups have long shared the same general goal of legal abortion, the alliance has over time been an uneasy one, and in many ways a contradictory one. This paper traces points of convergence as well as points of contention between the two groups, specifically: highlighting the tensions between the feminist view of abortion as a women-centred service, with a limited, 'technical' role for the physicians, and the abortion-providing physicians' logic of further medicalization/professional upgrading of abortion services as a response to the longstanding marginality and stigmatisation of abortion providers. Only by noting the evolving relationships between these two crucial sets of actors can one fully understand the contemporary abortion rights movement. We conclude by speculating about similar patterns in medical/lay relationships in other health social movements where 'dissident doctors' and lay activists are similarly seeking recognition for medical services that are controversial.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Embodied health movements: new approaches to social movements in healthSociology of Health & Illness, 2004
- Historical Priorities and the Responses of Doctors' Associations to Abortion Reform Proposals in Britain and the United States, 1960–1973Social Problems, 2003
- The Accessibility of Abortion Services In the United States, 2001Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, 2003
- Abortion Incidence and Services In the United States in 2000Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, 2003
- Providers, Pills and Power: The US Mifepristone Abortion Trials and Caregivers’ Interpretations of Clinical Power DynamicsHealth: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine, 2001
- Medical Professionalism in SocietyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1999
- The Changing Nature of Professional ControlAnnual Review of Sociology, 1984
- The Changing Nature of Professional ControlAnnual Review of Sociology, 1984
- Countermovements and Conservative Movements in the Contemporary U.S.Annual Review of Sociology, 1982