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Abortion - Abortion debate

Abortion - Abortion debate: Encyclopedia II - Abortion - Abortion debate

Over the course of the history of abortion, induced abortions have been a source of considerable debate and controversy regarding the morality and legality of this practice. An individual's position on the complex ethical, moral, philosophical, biological, and legal issues have a strong relationship with that individual's value system. A person's position on abortion may be best described as a combination of their personal beliefs on the morality of abortion, and that person's beliefs on the ethical scope and responsibility of legitimate governmental and legal authority. Another factor for many individuals is rel ...

See also:

Abortion, Abortion - Definitions, Abortion - Spontaneous abortion, Abortion - Incidence, Abortion - Induced abortion methods, Abortion - Surgical abortion, Abortion - Chemical abortion, Abortion - Other means of abortion, Abortion - Health effects, Abortion - Suggested effects, Abortion - History of abortion, Abortion - Social issues, Abortion - Unsafe abortion, Abortion - Sex-selective abortion, Abortion - Abortion debate, Abortion - Public opinion, Abortion - Abortion law, Abortion - Sources

Abortion, Abortion - Abortion debate, Abortion - Abortion law, Abortion - Chemical abortion, Abortion - Definitions, Abortion - Health effects, Abortion - History of abortion, Abortion - Incidence, Abortion - Induced abortion methods, Abortion - Other means of abortion, Abortion - Public opinion, Abortion - Sex-selective abortion, Abortion - Social issues, Abortion - Sources, Abortion - Spontaneous abortion, Abortion - Suggested effects, Abortion - Surgical abortion, Abortion - Unsafe abortion, Abortion in Canada, Abortion in the Republic of Ireland, Abortion in the United Kingdom, Abortion in the United States, Adoption, Partial-birth abortion, Pregnancy, Religion and abortion, Selective reduction, Self-induced abortion, Sex-selective abortion and infanticide, Wrongful abortion

Abortion: Encyclopedia II - Abortion - Abortion debate



Abortion - Abortion debate

Over the course of the history of abortion, induced abortions have been a source of considerable debate and controversy regarding the morality and legality of this practice. An individual's position on the complex ethical, moral, philosophical, biological, and legal issues have a strong relationship with that individual's value system. A person's position on abortion may be best described as a combination of their personal beliefs on the morality of abortion, and that person's beliefs on the ethical scope and responsibility of legitimate governmental and legal authority. Another factor for many individuals is religious doctrine (see religion and abortion).

Abortion debates, especially pertaining to abortion laws, are often spearheaded by advocacy groups belonging to one of two camps. Most often those in favor of legal prohibition of abortion describe themselves as pro-life while those against legal restrictions on abortion describe themselves as pro-choice. Both are used to indicate the central principles in arguments for and against abortion: "Is the fetus a human being with a fundamental right to life?" for pro-life advocates, and, for those who are pro-choice, "Does a woman have the right to choose whether or not to have an abortion?"

In both public and private debate, arguments presented in favour of or against abortion focus on either the moral permissibility of an induced abortion, or justification of laws permitting or restricting abortion. Arguments on morality and legality tend to collide and combine, complicating the issue at hand.

Debate also focuses on whether the pregnant woman should have to notify and have the consent of others in distinct cases: a minor her parents; a legally married or common-law wife her husband; or a pregnant woman the biological father. In a 2003 Gallup poll in the United States, 72% of respondants were in favour of spousal notification, with 26% opposed; of those polled, 79% of males and 67% of females responded in favour. [62]

Abortion - Public opinion

Political sides have largely been divided into absolutes. The abortion debate, as such, tends to center around individuals who hold strong positions. However, public opinion varies from poll to poll, country to country, and region to region:

  • Australia: In a February 2005 AC Nielsen poll, as reported in the The Age, 56% thought the current abortion laws, which generally allow abortion for the sake of life or health, were "about right," 16% want changes in law to make abortion "more accessible," and 17% want changes to make it "less accessible." [63] A 1998 poll, conducted by Roy Morgan Research, asked, "Do you approve of the termination of unwanted pregnancies through surgical abortion?" 65% of the Australians polled stated that they approved of surgical abortion and 25% stated that they disapproved of it. [64]
  • Canada: A recent poll of Canadians, conducted in April 2005 by Gallup, found that 52% of those polled want abortion laws to "remain the same," 20% want the laws to be "less strict," and 24% would prefer that the laws become "more strict." An earlier Gallup poll, from December 2001, asked, "Do you think abortions should be legal under any circumstances, legal only under certain circumstances or illegal in all circumstances and in what circumstances?" 32% of Canadians responded that they believe abortion should be legal in all circumstance, 52% that it should be legal in certain circumstances, and 14% that it should be legal in no circumstances. See Abortion in Canada.
  • Ireland: A 1997 Irish Times/MRBI poll of the Republic of Ireland's electorate found that 18% believe that abortion should never be permitted, 35% that one should be allowed in the event that the woman's life is threatened, 18% if her health is at risk, 28% that "an abortion should be provided to those who need it," and 5% were undecided. [65]
  • The United Kingdom: An online YouGov/Daily Telegraph poll in August 2005 found that 30% of Britons would back a measure to reduce the legal limit for abortion to 20 weeks, 19% support a limit of 12 weeks, 9% support a limit of less than 12 weeks, and 25% support maintaining the current limit of 24 weeks. 6% responded that abortion should never be allowed while 2% said it should be permitted throughout the entirety of pregnancy. [66]
  • The United States: In a January 2006 CBS News poll, which asked, "What is your personal feeling about abortion?", 27% of Americans said that abortion should be "permitted in all cases," 15% that it should be "permitted, but subject to greater restrictions than it is now," 33% that it should be "permitted only in cases such as rape, incest or to save the woman's life," 17% that it should "only be permitted to save the woman's life," and 5% that it should "never" be permitted. [67] A November 2005 Pew Research Center poll asked about Roe v. Wade and found that 29% of Americans want it overturned while 65% do not. [68]

Other related archives

19th-century, 20th century, AC Nielsen, Abortion in Canada, Abortion in Ireland, Abortion in the Republic of Ireland, Abortion in the United Kingdom, Abortion in the United States, Abortion-breast cancer (ABC) hypothesis, Adoption, American, American Medical Association, Americans, Apiaceae family, Asia, Australians, Back-alley abortion, Belgium, British Parliament, Britons, Burma, CBS News, Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Canadians, Chemical abortion, Chile, China, Constitution, Curettage, Cyrene, Daily Telegraph, Denmark, Dilation, Dilation and curettage, Dilation and suction curettage, Dr. Joel Brind, El Salvador, Electric vacuum aspiration, Fetal pain, Finland, Gallup, Greek, Guangdong, Gynaecology, Hainan, Hindu, History of abortion, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Ireland, Irish Times, Mainland China, Malaysia, Malta, Manual vacuum aspiration, Miscarriage, Misoprostol, Myelin, National Cancer Institute, Netherlands, Pain receptors, Partial-birth abortion, People's Republic of China, Pew Research Center, Phillipines, Pregnancy, R. v. Morgentaler, R. v. Morgentaler (1993), Religion and abortion, Republic of Ireland's, Roe v. Wade, Russia, Selective reduction, Self-induced abortion, Sex-selective abortion and infanticide, Soranus, South Korea, Soviet Union, Supreme Court of Canada, Taiwan, Tansy, Thailand, The Age, The United States, U.S. Constitution, U.S. Supreme Court, United Kingdom, United States, Unsafe abortions, Vietnam, World Health Organization, Wrongful abortion, YouGov, abdomen, abortifacient, abortion clinics, absolutes, advocacy groups, amendment, amniocentesis, amniotic fluid, anaesthesia, anthropologists, assault, authority, back-alley, biological, birth, birth rates, black cohosh, bladder, blood tests, bloodletting, bowel, breast, breast cancer, caesarian section, causal relationship, cellular differentiation, cerebral cortex, cervical incompetence, cervix, child abandonment, circumcision, clinical depression, clothes hangers, complications, conception, contraceptive, controversy, crime, cultural, curette, current abortion laws, daughters, debate, definitions, depression, developing nations, dilation and curettage, dilation and evacuation, disabled, dowries, drug, economic, ectopic pregnancy, education, embryo, emergency contraception, estrogen, ethical, ethics, eugenics, extinction, families, female, fetal development, fetus, folk medicine, forced sterilization, funeral rites, general anaesthesia, gestational age, governmental, haemorrhage, hemorrhage, herbs, history of abortion, hormonal levels, human, human rights, hysterotomy abortion, incest, infant, infanticide, intact dilation and extraction, knitting needles, laceration, lactation, laws, legal, liberty, male, mammalian pregnancies, massage, mechanical, medical community, medications, medicine, men, mental illness, methotrexate, mifepristone, minor, miscarriage, miscarriages, misoprostol, moral, morality, multiple organ failure, natural causes, neonate, neonates, nerve, nervous system, nociceptic, one-child policy, osmotic, parents, parity, partial-birth abortion, pennyroyal, perforation, pessaries, philosophical, physician, physicians, places in which abortion is legal, poisonous, political, population control, post-abortion syndrome, post-traumatic stress disorder, postpartum, pregnancy, pregnant woman, premature birth, pro-choice, pro-life, professionalism, prostaglandin, psychological, pump, questionnaire, rape, reflexive, registries, religion and abortion, response bias, right to life, right to privacy, rupees, saline, sanitation, self-induced, self-induced abortion, sepsis, septic shock, sex, sex ratio, sex-selective abortion, sex-selective abortion and infanticide, side effects, silphium, single motherhood, slang, social issues, societies, socio-economic, sons, statistical, statistically significant, stillbirth, stressor, suction-aspiration, surgery, syringe, tansy, thalamus, throughout the centuries, trauma, trimester, ulcer, ultrasound, unsafe abortion, urea, uterus, value system, work



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Abortion debate", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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