2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.polgeo.2018.11.006
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Towards a political geography of abortion

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Cited by 36 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…While illegality and low socioeconomic status remain major obstacles in accessing abortion, the increasing accessibility of medical abortion is making clandestine abortion safer (Singh et al, 2018). Sydney Calkin (2019) argues that medical abortion, especially in conjunction with feminist activist strategies to make it available (often illegally), means that 'abortion access is becoming less connected to physical clinic spaces and, by extension, less tethered to national legal frameworks' (23). The impact of medical abortion is also significant in overcoming geographical barriers when legality is not an issue (Hyland, Raymond, & Chong, 2018;Upadhyay, 2017).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While illegality and low socioeconomic status remain major obstacles in accessing abortion, the increasing accessibility of medical abortion is making clandestine abortion safer (Singh et al, 2018). Sydney Calkin (2019) argues that medical abortion, especially in conjunction with feminist activist strategies to make it available (often illegally), means that 'abortion access is becoming less connected to physical clinic spaces and, by extension, less tethered to national legal frameworks' (23). The impact of medical abortion is also significant in overcoming geographical barriers when legality is not an issue (Hyland, Raymond, & Chong, 2018;Upadhyay, 2017).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the supply side, evidence in Calkin [53] indicates that state-level abortion restrictions have contributed to clinic closures and reduced operations. At the time of the study, there were 27 American cities considered to be "abortion deserts" because women had to travel over 100 miles to reach the nearest abortion clinic.…”
Section: Plos Onementioning
confidence: 99%
“…de manera prioritaria una atención segura a las mujeres, incluyendo a aquellas que pudieran estar afectadas por la COVID-19 (RCOG, 2020). Ante estas circunstancias, el denominado aborto medicamentoso resurge como una alternativa que ofrece un acceso seguro al aborto durante el primer trimestre de gestación (OMS, 2014), fuera de los espacios clínicos y con una menor sujeción a las restricciones legales (Calkin, 2019;Triviño, 2012). Además, supone un recurso para evitar desplazamientos innecesarios (Todd-Gher y Shah, 2020; Upadhyay, 2017), especialmente en una situación como la producida por la COVID-19, en la que el mandato imperante está siendo permanecer en casa y evitar lugares cerrados y concurridos que incrementen el riesgo de contagio.…”
Section: El Aborto En Tiempos De Coronavirusunclassified