In the United States, the “right to choose” an abortion is the law of the land. But what if a woman continues her pregnancy because she didn’t really have a choice? What if state laws, federal policies, stigma, and a host of other obstacles push that choice out of her reach?
Based on candid, in-depth interviews with women who considered but did not obtain an abortion, No Real Choice punctures the myth that American women have full autonomy over their reproductive choices. Focusing on the experiences of a predominantly Black and low-income group of women, sociologist Katrina Kimport finds that structural, cultural, and experiential factors can make choosing abortion impossible–especially for those who experience racism and class discrimination. From these conversations, we see the obstacles to “choice” these women face, such as bans on public insurance coverage of abortion and rampant antiabortion claims that abortion is harmful. Kimport's interviews reveal that even as activists fight to preserve Roe v. Wade, class and racial disparities have already curtailed many women’s freedom of choice.
No Real Choice analyzes both the structural obstacles to abortion and the cultural ideologies that try to persuade women not to choose abortion. Told with care and sensitivity, No Real Choice gives voice to women whose experiences are often overlooked in debates on abortion, illustrating how real reproductive choice is denied, for whom, and at what cost.
Author(s): Katrina Kimport
Series: Families in Focus
Publisher: Rutgers University Press
Year: 2021
Language: English
Pages: 212
City: New Brunswick
Cover
Series Editors
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
1. No Real Choice
2. Policies, Poverty, and the Organization of Abortion Care
3. Privileging the Fetus
4. Seeing Irresponsibility and Harm
5. Fearing the Experience of Abortion
6. Choosing a Baby
7. Toward Reproductive Autonomy
Methodological Appendix
Acknowledgments
References
Index
About the Author
Series Titles