Fertility, childbirth and parenting Defining sexual and gender relations

Abstract

Major historical shifts in the field of fertility, childbirth and parenting have implications for feminist psychologists working on these topics. These shifts include approaches to sexuality and reproduction: a population control emphasis in the late 1940s, a reproductive rights paradigm in the 1990s, and progression from reproductive rights to reproductive justice. Feminist psychologists must traverse the political landscape created by these broad approaches. In this chapter, we suggest ways in which such engagement may be facilitated through examination of mainstream assumptions and outcomes and the use of nuanced feminist research. Drawing from transnational feminisms, the principles of reproductive justice, and examples of research and interventions in reproductive decisionmaking, abortion, obstetric violence, ‘deviant’ (m)others, early reproduction and contraception, we argue that feminist psychology should attend to both global and crosscutting power relations concerning fertility and reproduction, as well as localised dynamics

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