Bültmann & Gerriets
After Repeal
Rethinking Abortion Politics
von Kath Browne, Sydney Calkin
Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Taschenbuch
ISBN: 978-1-78699-718-0
Erschienen am 15.01.2020
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 135 mm [H] x 216 mm [B] x 20 mm [T]
Gewicht: 344 Gramm
Umfang: 300 Seiten

Preis: 24,50 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Kath Browne is a Professor of Geographies of Sexualities and Genders at University College Dublin. She has worked on Heteroactivism, LGBT equalities, lesbian geographies, gender transgressions and women's spaces. Her other publications include Ordinary in Brighton: LGBT, Activisms and the City (with Leela Bakshi, 2013), Queer Spiritual Spaces (2010), and the co-edited collections Lesbian Feminism (2019), Geographies of Sex and Sexualities (2016) and Lesbian Geographies (2015).
Sydney Calkin is a Lecturer in Geography and a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at Queen Mary University of London. Her current research investigates the changing geographies of abortion access and the impact of transnational feminist social movements for reproductive justice. She is also the author of Human Capital in Gender and Development (2018).



Introduction, Sydney Calkin and Kath Browne
Part I: The Politics of Repeal
1. The 2018 abortion referendum: over before it began! Theresa Reidy
2. Explaining repeal: a long-term view, Linda Connolly
3. "The only lawyer on the panel": anti-choice lawfare in the battle for abortion law reform, Fiona de Londras and Máiréad Enright
4. Abortion pills in Ireland and beyond: what can the 8th Amendment referendum tell us about the future of self-managed abortion? Sydney Calkin
5. Of trust and mistrust: the politics of repeal, Elzbieta Drazkiewicz-Grodzicka and Máire Ní Mhórdha
Part II: Campaigns and Campaigning
6. "Enough judgement": reflections on campaigning for repeal in rural Ireland, Mary McGill
7. Campaigning for choice: canvassing as feminist pedagogy in Dublin Bay North, Niamh McDonald, Kate Antosik-Parsons, Karen E. Till, Jack Callan and Gerry Kearns
8. #Tá: pro-choice activism in the Irish language community, Lisa Nic an Bhreithimh
9. Maser's 'Repeal the 8th' mural: the power of public art in the age of social media, Lorna O'Hara
10. Repealing a 'legacy of shame': press coverage of emotional geographies of secrecy and shame in Ireland's abortion debate, Eric Olund
Part III: Futures: Ireland and Beyond
11. Placing the Catholic Church: the moral landscape of repealing the 8th, Richard Scriven
12. Losing Ireland: heteroactivist responses to the 8th Amendment in Canada and the UK, Kath Browne and Catherine Jean Nash
13. The primacy of place: in vitro 'unborn' and the 8th Amendment, Noëlle Cotter
14. Northern Ireland after repealing the 8th: democratic challenges, Lisa Smyth
15. Reflections after the Irish referendum: abortion, the Catholic Church and pro-choice mobilization in Poland, Dorota Szelewa



The referendum to overturn Ireland's near-total abortion ban in 2018 stands as one of the most remarkable political events of recent times. The campaign to repeal the 8th amendment succeeded not only in challenging centuries of religious and patriarchal dogma, but in signalling a major transformation in Irish society itself.
After Repeal explores both the campaign and the implications of the referendum result for politics, identity and culture today. Bringing together a range of international perspectives, this collection transcends geographical and disciplinary boundaries while exploring themes including activism, artwork, social movements, law, media, democratic institutions, and reproductive technologies. This work looks beyond the Irish context and to the future, offering unique insight into the wider struggle for reproductive justice around the world.


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