Publication: Pro-Choice v. Pro-Life: A Perennial Conundrum- An Alternative Discourse for Abortion in Sri Lanka
DOI
Type:
Article
Date
2021-09-25
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Faculty of Humanities and Sciences,SLIIT
Abstract
Abortion is a highly contested issue all over
the world. In Sri Lanka, the abortion
discourse is emotionally charged and
dictated by religious and customary norms
and practices that regulate female morality
and sexuality. Several attempts at
introducing menial changes to the law have
failed. Regulation of women in the private
sphere, subject to a different set of norms,
convolutes the theory of abortion as a right
to autonomy and bodily integrity. In the
United States, the pro-choice versus pro-life
debate has been central to the discourse on
a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy.
Since the ruling in Roe v. Wade, activists
from both spectrums have fought
aggressively to utilize the forces of politics
and law to catalyst change. Contrastingly,
most Western European states
decriminalized abortion whilst maintaining
a normative disapproval of abortion. The
legal processes adopted in Western
European countries situated the debate
within broader social and public policy
concerns. In this paper, it is argued that the
abortion discourse in Sri Lanka should be
isolated from the pro-choice/pro-life
dichotomy that pits women against their
unborn children, limiting possibilities and
compromises. The paper advocates an
alternative approach by engaging in a
comparative analysis. It draws attention to
the limitations of the privacy doctrine
beyond Roe and repositions the debate
within a broader socio-legal framework
which encapsulates the real concerns of
women.
Description
Keywords
Abortion, Pro-choice, Women, Sri Lanka, Pro-life
