Harm Reduction, Human Rights, and Access to Information on Safer Abortion

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    A harm reduction and human rights approach, grounded in the principles of neutrality, humanism, and pragmatism, supports women's access to information on the safer self-use of misoprostol in diverse legal settings. Neutrality refers to a focus on the risks and harms of abortion rather than its legal or moral status. Humanism refers to the entitlement of all women to care and concern for their lives and health, to be treated with respect, worth, and dignity, and to the empowerment of women to participate in decision-making and political action. Pragmatism accepts the historical reality that women will engage in unsafe abortion, including self-induction, while addressing factors that render them vulnerable to this reality, and requires assessment of interventions to reduce abortion-related harms on evidence of their real rather than intended effect. Criminal law reform is a necessary conclusion to a harm reduction and human rights approach.

    Original languageCanadian English
    JournalArticles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
    Publication statusPublished - Jan. 1 2012

    Keywords

    • Harm Reduction
    • Access to Medical Information
    • Medical Abortion
    • Misoprostol
    • Safer Use
    • Unsafe Abortion
    • Law Reform

    Disciplines

    • Health Law and Policy
    • Human Rights Law
    • Law
    • Law and Gender
    • Law and Society
    • Medical Jurisprudence

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