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seekerz
Guest
Relax, I’m simply stating the obvious. In order to justify the importance that is placed on legal remedies, we should be able to prove that these are in fact remedies. I am not making the argument that abortion should remain legal to prevent women from dying due to illegal procedures. I am just questioning the assumption that the abortion rate is related to the legality of abortion. Looking at these statistics from Guttmacher institute, it seems that the relationship is not as straightforward as is assumed.Dear seekerz,
you have yet to know that abortion occurs less frequently where it is illegal???
You must be very young, seekerz.
Read the article and tell me what you think. I’m not endorsing the use of contraception to prevent abortion, simply illustrating the state of things today. I’m sure the situation was different in the 1970s, but we have to deal with today’s realities.Yet, while it may seem paradoxical, a country’s abortion rate is not closely correlated with whether abortion is legal there. For example, abortion levels are quite high in Latin American countries, where abortion is highly restricted. (In fact, 20 million of the 46 million abortions performed annually worldwide occur in countries with highly restrictive abortion laws.) At the same time, abortion rates are quite low throughout Western Europe, where the procedure is legal and widely available. Also, Eastern and Western Europe have the world’s highest and lowest abortion rates, respectively, yet abortion is generally legal throughout the Continent.
If legality is not the determining factor, what drives the rates at which abortions occur in a given country?