Abortion is more contentious in the US than in Europe. While
Roe v. Wade settled the question of whether a woman can legally have one almost 50 years ago, the appointment of Amy Coney Barrett to the US Supreme Court on Monday was met with dismay by abortion rights supporters who fear she’ll overturn it.
In a
2013 essay about how principles of “stare decisis” might impact Roe v. Wade, Barrett, then a professor at Notre Dame University, pointed to the strength of the doctrine but suggested room for some cases to be overturned. “Court watchers,” she wrote, “embrace the possibility of overruling, even if they may want it to be the exception rather than the rule.”
She has previously signed a “right to life ad” that called for the protection of unborn children; suggested access to abortion could be limited; and in 2013 spoke “to her own conviction that
life begins at conception” during a professorial talk, according to Notre Dame Magazine.
“This is a time for extraordinarily deep concern about the right to abortion in the United States,” Julie Rikelman, senior director of US litigation at the Center for Reproductive Rights, told CNN.
“At every level of the Federal Court, we now have judges and justices who do not support the right to abortion and so the basic federal constitutional right is in jeopardy in a way that it hasn’t been for decades,” said Rikelman.
She said the right to abortion was also in “critical danger” at a state level, with 468 restrictions enacted since the start of 2011, according to the
Guttmacher Institute, a non-profit organization focused on reproductive rights.
That will disproportionately affect poor women, who are more likely to need abortions and to struggle with the expense of the procedure and traveling to a different state, Rikelman said.
“We already know there are
21 states that would ban abortion outright if given the opportunity to do so,” Mary Ziegler, a law professor at Florida State University and author of Abortion and the Law in America: Roe v. Wade to the Present, told CNN when asked what might happen if Roe v Wade is overturned.
Ziegler said recent restrictions on abortion, seen in
at least nine states, have a “chilling effect” on women who want a termination but are afraid of the consequences.
Restrictions across Europe
Central and Eastern Europe in particular have, seen multiple attempts to reduce women’s legal entitlements to abortion or to introduce new barriers.
Slovakia’s parliament earlier this month
voted against proposed
restrictions that would have required women to wait 96 hours before an abortion, banned clinics from “advertising” abortion services, and required women to justify their reasons for seeking an abortion.
It was one of several bills proposing restrictions on reproductive rights that were rejected in Slovakia’s parliament in 2019 and 2020.
In the past decade, several countries including Armenia, Russia, and Georgia introduced preconditions that women must fulfill before they can obtain abortion services.
In other countries attempts to roll back abortion rights have been largely unsuccessful, often following a public outcry and large-scale demonstrations, but “they provide a powerful illustration of the extent and nature of the backlash to the advancement of women’s rights and gender equality in some parts of Europe,” according to a 2017 paper published by the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights.
“A lot of countries in Europe are promoting women’s roles as procreators and as wives and mothers,” Hillary Margolis, senior researcher in women’s rights division at Human Rights Watch, told CNN.
“There are different ways these attacks are happening, they’re not always about blatantly rolling back abortion,” said Margolis.
In Germany, where abortion is relatively accessible, information dissemination or advertising by service providers is banned, although doctors may now state they provide the service on their
websites, and this has been exploited by anti-abortion groups, she said.
In 2019, two gynecologists were fined in Berlin for “advertising” abortion — and this was
widely reported as having
stemmed from efforts by anti-abortion activists.
Other gynecologists have also
been reported by anti-abortion campaigners, according to local media.
An anti-abortion protest “National March for Life,” demanding a ban on abortions, in Bratislava, Slovakia on September 2019.
Croatia and
Italy have seen extensive use of the “
conscience clause,” which allows providers to opt out of offering terminations because of moral objections, Margolis added.
Despite the backlash, human rights lawyer Payal Shah told CNN that it was important to remember there is a “clear global trajectory towards abortion law liberalization.”
“Over the last 25 years
nearly 50 countries have actually liberalized their laws and several others have even removed abortion wholesale from their criminal codes,” she said.
New Zealand, Northern Ireland, and most Australian states have decriminalized abortion to remove sanctions.
Countries including Ireland and Cyprus have liberalized to allow abortion up to certain gestational limits, and the likes of
France and Germany have introduced reforms to remove barriers — but criminal sanctions are still possible outside certain parameters. There have even been steps to make abortion more accessible in countries with restrictive laws, such as the
Philippines and
Colombia.
Other countries such as the UK, Ireland and France have
temporarily amended laws during the pandemic to allow abortion pills to be taken at home.
But activists say abortion laws still need updating in many countries to remove barriers. And steps taken by developed countries to reduce abortion access can have an impact on other parts of the world.
“The US is … really exporting its political agenda against abortion … under this administration,” said Shah. “The US has lost its legitimacy as a leader in reproductive rights.”
Global attitudes about abortions
Another element affecting abortion access worldwide is the fact that the US is a big donor to NGOs globally but this has been scaled back under President Donald Trump. He reinstated, expanded and renamed a restriction formerly known as the
Mexico City Policy — which prohibits foreign NGOs from receiving US funds if they provide abortion services or referrals. Critics refer to it as the
Global Gag Rule.
The sector has seen a loss of funding, with services scaled back, leading to greater need in communities, Sarah Shaw, global head of advocacy at Marie Stopes International, an NGO organization that provides abortion services, told CNN.
She said the rule was also damaging partnerships and perceptions around sexual and reproductive health and rights. “This is the bit that’s really sort of starting to change norms and has a really corrosive effect.”
Contrary to what might be expected,
research shows that in countries most reliant on US funding, abortions increase by 40% when the policy is in place.
Countries that liberalize their laws to increase access usually see the number of abortions drop, thanks in part to increased education, says Shaw.
Most people are in favor of at least some access to abortion. A recent
Ipsos Global Advisor survey of nearly 17,500 people from 25 countries found that 44% said abortion should be permitted whenever a woman wants one and 26% said it should be permitted under certain circumstances, such as if a woman has been raped.”
A 2018
Pew Research Center poll found that
58% of Americans surveyed say abortion should be legal in all or most cases, compared with 37% who said it should be illegal in all or most cases.
And
2018 Gallup polling found that 60% of American adults think first trimester abortions should generally be legal. In another Gallup poll the same year
64% of those questioned said they didn’t want Roe vs. Wade — which guarantees the right to an abortion in the first trimester — to be overturned.
Looking ahead, Wydrzynska says, “We are not worrying about the future.” She is continuing her work with the Abortion Dream Team to help women travel abroad, obtain the abortion pill or find other services and information on terminations. “We have been preparing for most of this.”
She says her team has been traveling Poland since December last year “activating the people in local communities” to become abortion activists and supporters.
“We are not seeking people to work because we have them on our side, months ago.”
CNN’s Artur Osinski, Antonia Mortensen, Zahid Mahmood and Lauren Kent contributed reporting.