Women valued being encouraged and supported to labour without using pharmacological pain relief by midwives with whom they developed a trusting relationship throughout pregnancy. Features of midwifery approaches to pain in labour and relational continuity of care have important implications for promoting normal birth and a positive experience of pregnancy, labour, and birth for women.
The ongoing instability in Argentina that emerged from the December 2001 uprising in Buenos Aires (the “Argentinazo”) has been one of the highest profile examples in recent years of reaction to the economic “disciplining” of a country. For enthusiasts, this reaction has been resistance, an upsurge against neoliberalisation by people conscious of what was happening and with alternative conceptions of how things should be (Aufheben 2003; Carrera and Cotarelo 2003; Dinerstein 2002; Galeano 2002; Harman 2002; “IM” 2002; Klein 2003a, 2003b; MAS 2002; Ollier 2003). Subaltern resistances such as those developed by Argentines have been the subject of much geographical writing on resistance in recent years (Castells 1997; Leyshon, Lee and Williams 2003; Pile and Keith 1997; Sharp et al 2000). This paper addresses the range of actions, or “action repertoire”(Tarrow 1998:20–21), of the Argentinazo to examine the extent to which alternative material and discursive “convergence spaces”(Routledge 2003) of political engagement emerged both as resistance to, and articulating a coherent alternative to, neoliberalism.
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