Weaponizing the law: Acción Familiar and ‘pro-life’ strategic litigation in Spain (1985–1990)
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/110815Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemMateria
'pro-life' movement Acción Familiar Spain strategic litigation history of abortion
Fecha
2026-02-05Referencia bibliográfica
Ignaciuk, Agata, Ángela Segura-Arenas, and María Mundi-López. "Weaponizing the Law: Acción Familiar and ‘Pro-Life’ Strategic Litigation in Spain (1985–1990)." The History of the Family (2026/02/05): 1–19. https://doi.org/10.1080/1081602X.2025.2612345.
Patrocinador
The research behind this article was developed within the two research projects funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation: ‘Juicios por aborto en la España democrática: derechos reproductivos, culturas materiales y culturas legales de la IVE’ (1970s–2000s) (grant PID2023-147989NB-I00, funded by MICIU/AEI and by ERDF, EU) and ‘Aborto no punible en España: ciencia, asistencia y movimientos sociales (décadas de 1980 y 1990)’ (grant PID2020-113312GA-I00, funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/).Resumen
This article explores the history of the Spanish ‘pro-life’ movement during the final decades of the twentieth century. While recent sociological scholarship has characterised the Spanish ‘pro-life’ movement of the 1980s as being dominated by uncoordinated and inexperienced organisations that were dependent on the Catholic Church, our analysis of primary sources, such as legal documents and media accounts, seeks to provide a more nuanced interpretation by examining the impact of Spanish ‘pro-life’ activism on access to abortion following the partial decriminalisation of 1985. To analyse this impact, we focus on Acción Familiar, an organisation that played a leading role in deploying strategic litigation against both abortion regulations and providers. We examine two examples of this strategic litigation: administrative litigation against the Royal Decree that liberalised the abortion marketplace in 1986, and criminal litigation against doctors who performed therapeutic abortions in a public hospital in Pamplona in 1986. Our case study shows that Acción Familiar employed a ‘conventional’ litigation strategy to achieve objectives typically associated with ‘direct action’: the harassment and intimidation of doctors. In doing so, the organisation created symbolic and material barriers to abortion, restricting access to the procedure in Spain within the legal framework of partial decriminalisation (1985–2010), a time when abortion was permitted in certain circumstances.





