Pregnancy and the 40-Year Prison Sentence: How "Abortion Is Murder" Became Institutionalized in the Salvadoran Judicial System
- PMID: 28630543
- PMCID: PMC5473040
Pregnancy and the 40-Year Prison Sentence: How "Abortion Is Murder" Became Institutionalized in the Salvadoran Judicial System
Abstract
Using the case of El Salvador, this article demonstrates how the anti-abortion catchphrase "abortion is murder" can become embedded in the legal practice of state judicial systems. In the 1990s, a powerful anti-abortion movement in El Salvador resulted in a new legal context that outlawed abortion in all circumstances, discouraged mobilization for abortion rights, and encouraged the prosecution of reproduction-related "crimes." Within this context, Salvadoran women initially charged with the crime of abortion were convicted of "aggravated homicide" and sentenced to up to 40 years in prison. Court documents suggest that many of these women had not undergone abortions, but had suffered naturally occurring stillbirths late in their pregnancies. Through analysis of newspaper articles and court cases, this article documents how El Salvador came to prosecute obstetrical emergencies as "murder," and concludes that activism on behalf of abortion rights is central to protecting poor pregnant women from prosecution for reproduction-related "crimes."
Conflict of interest statement
Competing interests: None declared.
References
-
- Paltrow L. M. “Roe v Wade and the new Jim Crow: Reproductive rights in the age of mass incarceration,”. American Journal of Public Health. 2013;103(1):17–21. On the U.S., see. - PMC - PubMed
- Paltrow L.M., Flavin J. “Arrests of and forced interventions on pregnant women in the United States, 1973-2005: Implications for women’s legal status and public health,”. Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law. 2013;38(2):299–343. - PubMed
- Pain J., Tamés Noriega R., Beltran y Puga A. L. “Using litigation to defend women prosecuted for abortion in Mexico: Challenging state laws and the implications of recent court judgments,”. Reproductive Health Matters. 2014;22(44):61–69. on Mexico, see. - PubMed
- Gaestel A., Shelley A. “Mexican women pay high price for country’s rigid abortion laws,”. The Guardian. 2014 Oct 1; http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2014/oct/01/mexican-women-... Available at.
- Casas-Becerra L. “Women prosecuted and imprisoned for abortion in Chile.”. Reproductive Health Matters. 1997;5(9):29–36. on Chile, see.
- Ramaseshan G. “Women imprisoned for abortion in Nepal: Report of a Forum Asia fact-finding mission,”. Reproductive Health Matters. 1997;5(10):133–138. on Nepal, see.
- Filipovic J. “Women in Rwanda are being jailed and shamed for having abortions,”. Cosmopolitan. 2015 http://www.cosmopolitan.com/politics/a47478/rwanda-abortion/ on Rwanda, see. Available at.
-
- Caminos del Sol E. “The horrors of abortion,”. El Diario de Hoy. 1997 Jan 8;:10.
-
- Lee S. J., Ralston H. J. P., Drey E. A., Partridge J. C., Rosen M. “Fetal pain: A systematic multidisciplinary review of the evidence,”. Journal of the American Medical Association. 2005;294(8):947–954. - PubMed
- Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists. “Fetal awareness: Review of research and recommendations for practice,”. 2010 https://www.rcog.org.uk/globalassets/documents/guidelines/rcogfetalaware... Available at.
-
- Garcia J. “Arzobispo pide detener el aborto,”. El Diario de Hoy. 1997 Jan 13;:61.
-
- Mejía F. “Jóvenes dicen ‘Sí a la vida!’”. El Diario de Hoy. 1997 Apr 25;:2.
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources