Dernière publication sur les droits reproductifs -> “From choice to capabilities: abortion and reproductive justice”, Sciences Po LIEPP Working Paper n°169, Octobre 2024, avec Hazal Atay, forthcoming in Feminist economics.
Research on telemedicine abortion
Abortion remains a deeply contentious issue across the globe, including in Europe. Recent changes around telemedicine abortion and self-managed abortion, however, challenge this paradigm and require new scientific inquiries. While debates often revolve around moral, legal, and medical considerations, there is a critical aspect that is often overlooked: the socio-economic determinants and outcomes of abortion access. Despite the European continent historically having more progressive abortion laws compared to other regions, research on abortion is often confined to a medico-legal paradigm.
Telemedicine abortion, or self-managed abortion, has long been advocated and practiced by feminist groups and has only been adopted by several countries in the course and/or aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic. Several countries, including the United States, France, the United Kingdom, and Ireland, have amended their laws and policies to allow women to manage their own abortions in the first quarter of pregnancy, following feminist practices, scientific evidence, and WHO recommendations on the issue. In a significant step toward the demedicalization of abortion, telemedicine abortion now holds the potential to bridge the gap in abortion access in Europe, while also altering the power dynamics involved in the abortion process and access. Research from the US demonstrates that abortion access contributes to women’s empowerment and gender equality by contributing to increased educational attainment and female labor force participation.
This project aims to address socio-economic determinants and outcomes of abortion access in Europe in light of the recent developments around telemedicine and self-managed abortions. The European context is not only diverse when it comes to abortion law and policy landscape, but also provides avenues for supranational analyses as countries are also mobilized at the European Union level for abortion rights and access. Moreover, European countries are among the few countries which embraced telemedicine abortion provision, whose impact is yet to be studied. This project builds on two other projects we undertook previously : 1) Access to abortion and telemedicine abortion in france: a mixed-method study on why individuals resort to telemedical abortion over local abortion services in France and 2) Abortion in the european union: institutional sources of divergences and solidarities supported by the LIEPP. Our first collaboration resulted in a publication in the British Medical Journal and has been a key reference (and the only study) about the telemedicine abortion reform in France. This resulted in an article, which received conditional acceptance from Feminist Economics journal. In an attempt to share our insights and research agenda, on 1 December 2023, we convened an international symposium at Sciences Po entitled “Navigating the Controversy: Reproductive Rights and Futures”. The conference highllights can be found here. This was a starting point for future collaborations with researchers from different fields.
By providing a comprehensive understanding of abortion and telemedicine abortion that transcends the confines of a mere medico-legal framework, we aim to integrate abortion rights and access into broader discussions and policies on gender equality by elucidating the intricate interplay between abortion access, women’s empowerment, and gender equality. This project advances several questions:
Analyze the potential of telemedicine and self-managed abortion practices to mitigate barriers to access both within countries and at the European level
How do socio-economic factors such as income level, education, and distance to healthcare services impact abortion access across various European countries?
How the different telemedicine abortion models adopted in several European countries influence abortion access in country and at the European level?
How does abortion access, particularly through telemedicine and self-managed practices, influence women’s socio-economic outcomes, including empowerment and gender equality, across different European countries?
We plan to focus on some case studies. These may include a range of countries, both progressive and less progressive countries in terms of abortion access, such as Hungary, Poland, France, and the Netherlands, following a “most different” approach. To this end, we have already established an agreement with an international telemedicine abortion provider service called Women on Web. Women on Web is one of the first telemedicine abortion services to be established in 2005 and operates in several countries, providing access to abortion care. Women on Web provide anonymized data for our research.
Team research
Hazal Atay, LIEPP, PRESAGE, Sciences Po.
Gabrielle Sagot, Insee, Département d’économie Sciences Po
Héléne Périvier, OFCE, PRESAGE, Sciences Po.