The decision to have an abortion in Flanders: a societal, relational, and individual story

  • Auteur Joke Vandamme, Ann Buysse, Guy T’Sjoen
  • Pdf openbaar No

Induced abortion has mostly been studied from one particular point of view. Hence, sociologists, political scientists and anthropologists often focus on the analysis of prevailing norms, values and laws regarding induced abortion; psychologists like to study women’s individual emotional wellbeing pre- and post-abortion; and medical doctors mostly pay attention to the study of the best abortion techniques. The starting point of the current analysis of the decision to have an abortion is a systemic-contextual perspective on the issue. From that point of view, attention is being paid to the different levels at which a decision for abortion occurs: the societal and group level (who is being confronted with an unintended pregnancy; who decides to have an abortion and why?), the very often neglected relational and interpersonal level (who else is involved in this decision and how do these people play a role?) and finally the individual and intrapersonal level (how does the woman experience the decisional process herself?). By making use of five empirical studies, described in the doctoral thesis of the main author, an answer is given to remaining research questions at each of these three levels. For the purpose of the doctoral thesis, a population based survey on sexual and reproductive health, administrated to men and women living in Flanders (Sexpert, 2013), was combined with specific survey studies in women opting for induced abortion and male partners involved in the abortion process. The results provide an insight into the complexity of this issue and inform the reader about three different stories.

Gepubliceerd in 2018, Volume 42, Issue 1

ISSUES