So close, so far: Vulnerability and sexual and reproductive rights in the COVID-19 era
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Abortion Pregnancy Childbirth Obstetric Violence Intersectionality
Date
2022Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Massó Guijarro, E., Triviño-Caballero, R. (2022). So Close, So Far: Sexual and Reproductive Rights in the COVID-19 Era. In: Schweiger, G. (eds) The Global and Social Consequences of the COVID-19 Pandemic. Studies in Global Justice, vol 1212. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-97982-9_11
Patrocinador
Ministry of Science and Innovation, Spain [2019/00397/001]Résumé
The transformation that human societies are undergoing due to COVID-19 has significantly impacted
the sexual and reproductive rights of women and their infants. Pregnant and puerperal women, as
well as their babies, are victims of the gynaecobstetric patriarchal paradigm, which prevails —and
even becomes amplified— in times of pandemic. In this chapter we present an analysis of the right to
autonomous and respected childbirth, which includes lactation rights, as well as to abortion
processes, which have been specifically compromised since the beginning of the pandemic. Despite
the disparities between both situations, which each entail different needs, timing and responses, we
argue that they coincide in the lack of recognition of pregnant women’s sexual and reproductive rights, as the measures adopted respond to healthcare inertias and ideological interests rather than
to public health needs. This lack of recognition also affects their infants, to the extent that they are
intrinsically interdependent on their mothers. The demand to reflect on sexual and reproductive
health rights arises within an epistemic framework that includes the implications of both gendered
dimensions as well as other potential sources of vulnerability in relation to the virus. Applying both
intersectionality and the obstetric violence paradigm as a methodological approach, we claim that
pregnant women’s rights can be protected during the pandemic by ensuring their freedom of choice,
without significantly threatening public health safety. We hold that the crisis unleashed by COVID-19
can be an opportunity to bring visibility to situations of sexual and reproductive injustice and to
promote changes aimed to avoid it.