a Laboratory of Cultural and Social Anthropology, Institute of Social Sciences, Faculty of Social and Political Sciences , University of Lausanne , Lausanne , Switzerland.
Glob Public Health. 2018 Jun;13(6):680-691. doi: 10.1080/17441692.2017.1284879. Epub 2017 Feb 3.
The emergence of Islamist movements and religious symbolic repertoires in the aftermath of the Tunisian revolution has elicited the political, moral, and practical contestation of women's right to abortion. While, after several heated debates, the law was eventually not modified, several practitioners working in government family planning clinics have changed their behaviour preventing women getting abortions. Pre-existing state and medical logics, political uncertainties, and new religious and moralising discourses have determined abortion practices in the government health-care facilities generating unequal treatments according to women's marital status, class, and education. This paper will investigate the multiple logics affecting abortion practices in post-revolutionary Tunisia, focusing on the dissonant logics mobilised by health-care professionals as well as structural socioeconomic factors.
突尼斯革命后伊斯兰主义运动和宗教象征体系的出现,引发了关于妇女堕胎权的政治、道德和实际争议。尽管在经过几次激烈的辩论后,法律最终没有修改,但在政府计划生育诊所工作的一些从业者改变了他们的行为,阻止妇女堕胎。原有的国家和医疗逻辑、政治不确定性以及新的宗教和道德话语,决定了政府医疗机构的堕胎实践,根据妇女的婚姻状况、阶级和教育程度造成了不平等的待遇。本文将调查影响突尼斯革命后堕胎实践的多种逻辑,重点关注医疗保健专业人员调动的不和谐逻辑以及结构性社会经济因素。