Document Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
January 2022
Source
Routledge Handbook of Feminist Bioethics
First Page
451
Last Page
462
Abstract
The reproductive rights of women have been a central topic in feminist bioethics. The focus has been predominantly on the right not to reproduce, and so not to be subject to pronatalist social forces that make motherhood compulsory for women. That is the case despite many women and other members of marginalized groups experiencing anti-natalism, or in other words, social pressure to avoid biological reproduction. For these groups, the right to reproduce is as important, if not more important, than the right not to reproduce. This chapter concentrates on the right to reproduce and considers what form it should take in feminist bioethics. The main claim of the chapter is that feminists should ground the right in the need to protect marginalized groups from anti-natalism.
Included in
Applied Ethics Commons, Ethics and Political Philosophy Commons, Feminist Philosophy Commons