{"title":"Debating Abortion and Contraception in Socialist Yugoslavia","authors":"C. Bonfiglioli, Sara Žerić","doi":"10.15176/vol60no108","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article discusses the debates on abortion rights and practices that took place in socialist Yugoslavia. It focuses on the microhistorical case studies of Varaždin and Karlovac, with specific attention given to the period between the first liberalisation of abortion for social reasons in 1960 and the full liberalisation of abortion until 10 weeks in 1969. The primary sources for this article stem from the collections of the Conference for the Social Activity of Women in the Croatian State Archives, as well as periodicals such as Arhiv za zaštitu majke i djeteta issued by the Institute for the Protection of Mother and Child in Zagreb. Digitalised local press sources – Varaždinski vjesnik and Karlovački tjednik – are also explored. As shown in the paper, the liberalisation of abortion in 1960s Yugoslavia generated a wide array of dilemmas for women and practitioners alike. While legal abortions were seen as necessary to curb illegal ones, they were nonetheless perceived by local practitioners as something that should best be prevented and which could prejudice a woman’s reproductive abilities, particularly in the case of first pregnancies. Many women recurred to legal and illegal abortion as a result of the lack in health infrastructure, unavailable contraceptives, difficult social conditions and persisting patriarchal gender norms.","PeriodicalId":38816,"journal":{"name":"Narodna Umjetnost","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Narodna Umjetnost","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15176/vol60no108","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This article discusses the debates on abortion rights and practices that took place in socialist Yugoslavia. It focuses on the microhistorical case studies of Varaždin and Karlovac, with specific attention given to the period between the first liberalisation of abortion for social reasons in 1960 and the full liberalisation of abortion until 10 weeks in 1969. The primary sources for this article stem from the collections of the Conference for the Social Activity of Women in the Croatian State Archives, as well as periodicals such as Arhiv za zaštitu majke i djeteta issued by the Institute for the Protection of Mother and Child in Zagreb. Digitalised local press sources – Varaždinski vjesnik and Karlovački tjednik – are also explored. As shown in the paper, the liberalisation of abortion in 1960s Yugoslavia generated a wide array of dilemmas for women and practitioners alike. While legal abortions were seen as necessary to curb illegal ones, they were nonetheless perceived by local practitioners as something that should best be prevented and which could prejudice a woman’s reproductive abilities, particularly in the case of first pregnancies. Many women recurred to legal and illegal abortion as a result of the lack in health infrastructure, unavailable contraceptives, difficult social conditions and persisting patriarchal gender norms.
本文讨论了社会主义南斯拉夫关于堕胎权和堕胎实践的辩论。它侧重于瓦拉津和卡罗瓦茨的微观历史案例研究,特别关注从1960年出于社会原因首次放开堕胎到1969年10周前全面放开堕胎之间的时期。这篇文章的主要来源于克罗地亚国家档案馆妇女社会活动会议的收藏,以及萨格勒布保护母亲和儿童研究所发行的《Arhiv za zaštitu majke i djeteta》等期刊。还探索了数字化的当地新闻来源——Varaždinski vjesnik和Karlovački tjednik。如论文所示,20世纪60年代南斯拉夫堕胎自由化给妇女和从业者带来了一系列困境。虽然合法堕胎被视为遏制非法堕胎的必要手段,但当地从业者认为,合法堕胎是最好预防的,可能会损害妇女的生殖能力,尤其是在首次怀孕的情况下。由于缺乏卫生基础设施、无法获得避孕药具、社会条件困难以及重男轻女的性别规范,许多妇女再次进行合法和非法堕胎。