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The Role of Reproductive Justice Movements in Challenging South Korea's Abortion Ban

  • 주제(기타) Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
  • 설명문(일반) [Kim, Sunhye] George Washington Univ, Int Affairs, Washington, DC 20052 USA; [Kim, Sunhye] George Washington Univ, GW Inst Korean Studies, Washington, DC 20052 USA; [Young, Na] Ctr Sexual RigHts & Reprod JusticE, Joint Act Reprod Justice & Representat SHARE, Seoul, South Korea; [Lee, Yurim] Ctr Sexual RigHts & Reprod JusticE, SHARE, Seoul, South Korea
  • 등재 SSCI, SCOPUS
  • 발행기관 HARVARD UNIV PRESS
  • 발행년도 2019
  • 총서유형 Journal
  • URI http://www.dcollection.net/handler/ewha/000000172087
  • 본문언어 영어

초록/요약

This paper examines how issues related to abortion have historically been influenced by population control policies in South Korea and how the contemporary reproductive justice movement in South Korea has contributed to social change. On April 11, 2019, South Korea's Constitutional Court ruled that the ban on abortion was unconstitutional. As a result, South Korea's legislature must revise the 66-year old anti-abortion law by December 31, 2020. This historic decision was closely related to the advocacy of a number of feminist groups, doctors' organizations, disability rights groups, youth activists, and religious groups in South Korea, who collectively formed the Joint Action for Reproductive Justice (Joint Action) in 2017. This paper describes the activism and actions of Joint Action as a key part of reproductive justice movements in Korea. Joint Action was initiated by an organization for women with disabilities, and once formed, they worked collectively to frame abortion as a social justice issue that goes beyond the pro-choice versus pro-life binary. By focusing on the composition, strategies, and main agenda of Joint Action, this paper analyzes how Joint Action influenced the Constitutional Court's 2019 decision to decriminalize abortion in South Korea and how the court established that it is the government's responsibility to ensure every individual's reproductive health and rights.

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