Abstract
Gender and sexuality have become a focal point of the political divide in Latin America. In many countries, religious actors, political leaders, pro-life and pro-family nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), among others, have come together to promote a neoconservative shift in contemporary regional politics. Despite the constant public presence of religious actors and their long-standing influence on public policies in the region, recent challenges to sexual and reproductive rights have come from a field in transformation. The anti-abortion mobilization shows important signs of adaptation and mutation on different fronts – networks, alliances, strategies, and frameworks. Finally, this process of renovation has led to the expansion of this dispute towards a broader anti-gender alliance, and the increasing importance of legal strategies and tools by anti-abortion actors is remarkable. The transformations in the anti-abortion field were globally put into action after the conservatives’ defeat in the UN Conference in Cairo, and they also interacted with different local processes, in response to the relational dynamics between movement and countermovement. However, we can see important convergences among Latin-American cases. Drawing on evidence from case studies of countries in the region, this article analyses the main characteristics of contemporary anti-abortion activism in Latin America. It identifies significant commonalities among the cases and raises the hypotheses that shifts in the composition of the anti-abortion networks, in mobilization strategies and frames are inserted in a trend that has been transnationally diffused and subject to different processes of vernacularization. This article ultimately calls attention to the need for more empirical research to address the regional dynamics of transnational actors, diffusion processes, and local adaptations.
Anti-abortion movement in Latin America; abortion; sexual and reproductive rights; anti-gender campaigns; mobilization and countermobilization; neoconservatism; Latin America
Resumo
Gênero e sexualidade tornaram-se um foco de polarização política na América Latina. Em muitos países, atores religiosos, líderes políticos e organizações não governamentais (ONGs) “pró-vida” e “pró-família”, entre outros, uniram-se para promover uma mudança neoconservadora na política regional contemporânea. Apesar da constante presença pública de atores religiosos e de sua influência de longa data nas políticas públicas da região, os ataques recentes aos direitos sexuais e reprodutivos vêm de um campo em transformação. A mobilização antiaborto mostra importantes sinais de adaptações e mutações em diferentes frentes – em redes, alianças, estratégias e enquadramentos. Finalmente, esse processo de renovação levou à expansão do próprio campo de disputa para um campo ampliado da aliança antigênero, sendo digna de nota a importância crescente de estratégias e ferramentas legais para atores antiaborto. As transformações no campo do antiaborto foram colocadas em marcha globalmente com a derrota dos conservadores na Conferência da Organização das Nações Unidas (ONU) no Cairo e interagiram com diferentes processos locais, respondendo às dinâmicas relacionais entre movimento e contramovimento. De qualquer modo, observamos convergências importantes entre os casos latino-americanos. A partir de evidências de alguns estudos de caso de países na região, este artigo analisa as principais características do ativismo antiaborto na área e identifica os pontos comuns entre os casos, levantando a hipótese de que as mudanças atuais na composição das redes antiaborto, suas estratégias de mobilização e enquadramentos indicam uma tendência difundida transnacionalmente, embora sujeita a diferentes processos de vernacularização. O texto, em última instância, chama a atenção para a necessidade de mais pesquisa empírica para acessar as dinâmicas regionais de atores transnacionais, processos de difusão e adaptações locais.
Movimento antiaborto na América Latina; aborto; direitos sexuais e reprodutivos; campanhas antigênero; mobilização e contramobilização; neoconservadorismo; América Latina
INTRODUCTION
The recent actions of neoconservative actors worldwide against sexual and reproductive rights (SRR) have fueled concerns about their negative impacts. One example of these concerns is the call made by a group of United Nations (UN) experts to resist the global battle against SRR deployed by conservative religious groups. These groups’ agenda is undermining women’s and girls’ capacity to make decisions about their own bodies and to receive comprehensive sex education ( BENNOUNE, 2017BENNOUNE, Karima. Statement by Karima Bennoune Special Rapporteur in the Field of Cultural Rights at the Seventy-Second Session of the General Assembly Item 73 (b & c) . New York: United Nations Human Rights, October 25, 2017. Available at: https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=22331&LangID=E. Accessed on: April 13, 2022.
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). This is not the first warning that the UN has made regarding this phenomenon. The UN Special Rapporteur on Cultural Rights has also documented the role of fundamentalist and extremist ideologies in the abuse of women’s human rights by state and non-state actors, as well as the need to campaign against that abuse and the ideologies that give rise to it ( UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 2017UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY. Report of the Special Rapporteur in the Field of Cultural Rights: UN Doc. A/HRC/34/56, 2017. ). In 2020, the Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief also highlighted how religious beliefs are invoked as a legitimate justification for violence or discrimination against women, girls, or LGBTQ+ persons ( UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY, 2020UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY. Report of the Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief: UN Doc. A/HRC/43/48, 2020. ).
In Latin America, gender and sexuality have become a focal point of the political divide. Abortion, women and LGBTQ+ rights, as well as sex education in schools, have entered the core of political battles in several countries, increasingly occupying space in electoral disputes and linking certain political actors to a broader conservative political agenda. “Conservative” ( MUJICA, 2007MUJICA, Jaris. Economía política del cuerpo: la restructuración de los grupos conservadores y el biopoder. Lima: Centro de Promoción y Defensa de los Derechos Sexuales y Reproductivos, 2007. ), “religious conservative” ( ROSTAGNOL, 2010ROSTAGNOL, Susana. Disputas sobre el control de la sexualidad: Activismo religioso conservador y dominación masculina. In: VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. El activismo religioso conservador en Latinoamérica . Córdoba: Católicas por el Derecho a Decidir, 2010. p. 149-170. ), “reactive politicization” ( VAGGIONE, 2005VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Reactive Politicization and Religious Dissidence: The Political Mutations of the Religious. Social Theory and Practice , [ s.l. ], v. 31, n. 2, p. 165-188, Apr. 2005. Available at: https://doi.org/10.5840/soctheorpract200531210. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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), “fundamentalist” ( VUOLA, 2005VUOLA, Elina. El ecumenismo fundamentalista, los feminismos transnacionales y el orden tutelar de la sociedad latinoamericana. Pasos , [ s.l. ], v. 117, p. 30-36, 2005. ), “backlash mobilization” ( RUIBAL, 2014RUIBAL, Alba M. Movement and Counter-Movement: A History of Abortion Law Reform and the Backlash in Colombia 2006-2014. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 42-51, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44803-1. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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; MACHADO, 2018MACHADO, Maria das Dores Campos. Religion and Moral Conservatism in Brazilian Politics. Politics and Religion Journal , [ s.l. ], v. 12, n. 1, p. 55-74, 2018. ), and “anti-gender movement” ( PATERNOTTE, 2015PATERNOTTE, David. Blessing the Crowds: Catholic Mobilisations against Gender in Europe. In: HARK, Sabine; VILLA, Paula Irene (eds.). (Anti-)Genderismus: Sexualität und Geschlecht als Schauplätze aktueller politischer Auseinandersetzungen. Bielefeld: Transcript, 2015. ) are among the terms used to describe such broad opposition to SRR. Other authors, using the concept of “neoconservatism” ( GIANELLA-MALCA et al. , 2017GIANELLA-MALCA, Camila; MACHADO, Marta Rodriguez de Assis; PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica. What Causes Latin America’s High Incidence of Adolescent Pregnancy? CMI Brief , [ s.l. ], v. 16, n. 9, p. 1-4, 2017. ; BIROLI, MACHADO and VAGGIONE, 2020BIROLI, Flávia; MACHADO, Maria das Dores Campos; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Gênero, neoconservadorismo e democracia . São Paulo: Boitempo, 2020. 224 p. ; LACERDA, 2019LACERDA, Marina Basso. O novo conservadorismo brasileiro . Porto Alegre: Zouk, 2019. 228 p. ), focus on the existence of political rationality and alliances — between religious and non-religious actors, as well as between moral conservative and neoliberal forces — that produce a form of political resistance to cultural and political changes expressed through the regulation of sexual morality ( BROWN, 2006BROWN, Wendy. American Nightmare: Neoliberalism, Neoconservatism, and De-Democratization. Political Theory, [ s.l. ], v. 34, n. 6, p. 690-714, 2006. and 2019BROWN, Wendy. In the Ruins of Neoliberalism: The Rise of Antidemocratic Politics in The West. New York: Columbia University Press, 2019. 264 p. ;1
1
Brown (2019) revised her theoretical proposal. She now proposes that more than a confluence, the foundations of current neoconservatism and its defense of tradition are at the very roots of neoliberal thought.
COOPER, 2017COOPER, Melinda. Family Values: Between Neoliberalism and the New Social Conservatism. London: MIT Press, 2017. 416 p. ).
While analyzing cases in different countries, we have noticed that religious actors, political leaders, pro-life and pro-family nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), among others, have become important actors in the neoconservative wave in contemporary regional politics. These actors’ stated goals are to prevent, reverse, or restrict the legalization of abortion. Still, they have reconfigured their alliances and goals to oppose more broadly any measure aimed at gender and sexual orientation equality, such as recognizing same-sex marriage and transgender rights, in addition to promoting sex education in schools. It is important to highlight their shared commitment to traditional norms of masculinity, femininity, sexuality, and reproduction, forming a barrier against the “threats” to traditional moral and family values posed by feminist and LGBTIQIA+ movements ( VAGGIONE, 2005VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Reactive Politicization and Religious Dissidence: The Political Mutations of the Religious. Social Theory and Practice , [ s.l. ], v. 31, n. 2, p. 165-188, Apr. 2005. Available at: https://doi.org/10.5840/soctheorpract200531210. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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; PEÑAS DEFAGO and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2016PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Strategies of Self-Proclaimed Pro-Life Groups in Argentina: effect of new religious actors on sexual policies. Latin American Perspectives , [ s.l. ], v. 43, n. 3, p. 144-162, 2016. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0094582X15628022. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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).
Despite the constant public presence of religious actors and their long-standing influence on public policies in the region, the recent challenges to abortion and, more broadly, to sexual and reproductive rights are visibly arising from a field in transformation, which shows signs of adaptation and mutation in the networks, alliances, strategies, and frameworks. This article aims to grasp the main shifts in the trajectory of anti-abortion activism in the region by collecting illustrations from different Latin American countries. It calls attention to the formation of a conservative wave in Latin America, where we see strong signs of reconfiguration and expansion of the anti-abortion field towards a large alliance and audience organized around “anti-gender” campaigns. It also highlights the need for systematic studies that deepen our understanding of regional dynamics, transnational diffusion, and comparisons among different local contexts.
We used primary data of empirical research conducted in some Latin-American countries (Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, Peru, and El Salvador), complementing it with the small, but growing literature on the rise of conservative actors in the region ( MACHADO, 2012MACHADO, Maria das Dores Campos. Aborto e ativismo religioso nas eleições de 2010. Revista Brasileira de Ciência Política , Brasilia, n. 7, p. 25-54, 2012. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-33522012000100003. Accessed on: June 23, 2021.
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; VAGGIONE, 2012VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. La “cultura de la vida”: Desplazamientos estratégicos del activismo Católico conservador frente a los derechos sexuales y reproductivos. Religião e Sociedade , Rio de Janeiro, v. 32, n. 2, p. 57-80, 2012. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-85872012000200004. Accessed on: April 14 abr. 2022.
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; LEMAITRE, 2013LEMAITRE, Julieta Ripoll. Laicidad y resistencia: Movilización católica contra los derechos sexuales y reproductivos en América Latina. Colección de Cuadernos Jorge Carpizo: Para Entender y Pensar la Laicidade, Ciudad de México, n. 6, 2013. 71 p. ; PEÑAS DEFAGO and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2014PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Conservative Litigation against Sexual and Reproductive Health Policies in Argentina. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 82-90, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44805-5. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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; RUIBAL, 2014RUIBAL, Alba M. Movement and Counter-Movement: A History of Abortion Law Reform and the Backlash in Colombia 2006-2014. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 42-51, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44803-1. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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; REZENDE, 2016REZENDE, Patricia Jimenez. Movimentos sociais e contramovimentos: Mobilizações antiaborto no Brasil contemporâneo. 2016. Dissertação (Mestrado em Ciências Sociais) – Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Escola de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas, Guarulhos, 2016. Available at: https://repositorio.unifesp.br/bitstream/handle/11600/46119/Disserta%c3%a7%c3%a3o_REZENDE%2c%202016.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y. Accessed on: October 24, 2022.
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; GIANELLA-MALCA et al. , 2017GIANELLA-MALCA, Camila. Abortion Rights Legal Mobilization in the Peruvian Media, 1990-2015. Health and Human Rights Journal, [ s.l. ], v. 19, n. 1, p. 133-148, 2017. ; MACIEL and MACHADO, 2017MACIEL, Debora Alves; MACHADO, Marta Rodriguez de Assis. A arte da associação conservadora: o ativismo antiaborto no Brasil. Manuscript presented in the Department of Political Science, USP, 2017. ; CORRÊA, 2018CORRÊA, Sônia. A “política do gênero”: um comentário genealógico. Cadernos Pagu , [ s.l. ], n. 53, 2018. ; GIANELLA-MALCA, 2018GIANELLA-MALCA, Camila. Movimiento transnacional contra el derecho al aborto en América Latina. In: BERGALLO, Paola; SIERRA, Isabel Cristina Jaramillo; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco (eds.). El aborto en América Latina: estrategias jurídicas para luchar por su legalización y enfrentar las resistencias conservadoras. Buenos Aires: Siglo XXI Editores, 2018, p. 351-378. ; MACHADO, 2018MACHADO, Maria das Dores Campos. Religion and Moral Conservatism in Brazilian Politics. Politics and Religion Journal , [ s.l. ], v. 12, n. 1, p. 55-74, 2018. ; QUADROS and MADEIRA, 2018QUADROS, Marcos Paulo dos Reis; MADEIRA, Rafael Machado. Fim da direita envergonhada? Atuação da bancada evangélica e da bancada da bala e os caminhos da representação do conservadorismo no Brasil. Opinião Pública , Campinas, v. 24, n. 3, p. 486-522, set./dez. 2018. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1590/1807-01912018243486. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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; MONTE and VAGGIONE, 2019MONTE, María Eugenia; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Cortes irrumpidas: la judicialización conservadora del aborto en Argentina. Revista Rupturas , [ s.l. ], v. 9, n. 1, p. 104-122, 2019. ; MORÁN FAÚNDES and PEÑAS DEFAGO, 2020MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel; PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica. Una mirada regional de las articulaciones neoconservadoras. Rupturas y continuidades transnacionales. In: SANTANA, Ailynn Torres (ed.). Derechos en Riesgo en América Latina: 11 estudios sobre grupos neoconservadores. Bogotá: Ediciones desde Abajo/Fundación Rosa Luxemburgo, 2020. p. 241-270. ; VAGGIONE and MACHADO, 2020VAGGIONE, Juan Marco; MACHADO, Maria das Dores Campos. Religious Patterns of Neoconservatism in Latin America. Politics & Gender , England, v. 16, n. 1, Mar. 2020. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743923X20000082. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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; VAGGIONE and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2021VAGGIONE, Juan Marco; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Neoconservative incursions into Party Politics: The case of Argentina and Chile. In: SUTTON, Barbara; VACAREZZA, Nayla Luz. Abortion and Democracy: Contentious Body Politics in Argentina, Chile and Uruguay. New York: Routledge, 2021. ). Most part of our analysis is rooted in the mobilization within the abortion field, considering it one dimension of the neoconservative mobilization phenomenon. For the purpose of this paper, we refer to the field as anti-abortion activism, warning the reader that it is a transitional solution as the expansion of anti-abortion mobilization into a broader “anti-gender” or “neoconservative” mobilization is the object per se of this article.
Based on examples and discussions of country-specific episodes, we have traced the main common signs of adaptation of activism, strategies, and framework, which allowed us to formulate the hypothesis that anti-abortion activism has undergone important transformations in the region, expanding its incidence to different fronts. In the different Latin American countries that were analyzed, anti-abortion actors have started to use mobilization tactics generally used by progressive movements, such as marches, protests, litigation, and media campaigns. In some cases, they have also successfully built alliances with formal state institutions, partnered with local political parties, and participated in networks of local, national, and transnational civil society organizations comprising religious, interreligious, and secular groups. The secularization of discourse happened while religious frameworks lost their space to rights language, including disputes around the meaning of human rights. The anti-abortion field has been permeated by litigation, battles of legal interpretation, as well as the professional organization of lawyers, jurists, and think tanks.
The transnational advocacy networks once identified for progressive movements and particularly women’s movements ( KECK and SIKKINK, 1998KECK, Margaret E.; SIKKINK, Kathryn. Activists beyond Borders: Advocacy Networks in International Politics. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1998. 244 p. ; MERRY, 2006MERRY, Sally Engle. New Legal Realism and the Ethnography of Transnational Law. Law & Social Inquiry , [ s.l. ], v. 31, n. 4, p. 975-995, 2006. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-4469.2006.00042.x. Accessed on: April 11, 2022.
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) now seem to be operated by their opponents. Anti-abortion actors are deeply inserted in transnational networks that diffuse their agenda. By analyzing different cases in Latin America, we find traits and influences of strategies and frameworks circulating in the transnational arena. These innovations are diffused internationally and incorporated nationally through processes of vernacularization . Levitt & Merry (2009)LEVITT, Peggy; MERRY, Sally. Vernacularization on the Ground: Local Uses of Global Women’s Rights in Peru, China, India and the United States. Global Networks , [ s.l. ], v. 9, n. 4, p. 441-461, 2009. define vernacularization as the process of connecting transnationally available ideas with a locality, a process in which repertoires and frameworks “[not only] take on some of the ideological and social attributes of the place, but also retain some of their original formulations.” Thus, vernacularization depends on contextual political processes, responding simultaneously to international ideas and specific features of the local dispute. International diffusion interacts with local opportunities, which also guides adaptations and reshaping ( LEVITT and MERRY, 2009, pLEVITT, Peggy; MERRY, Sally. Vernacularization on the Ground: Local Uses of Global Women’s Rights in Peru, China, India and the United States. Global Networks , [ s.l. ], v. 9, n. 4, p. 441-461, 2009. , p. 452). In this sense, it is important to acknowledge that transnational trends are subjected to local processes of selection and adaptation with different dynamics, which helps explain the reason why countries similarly influenced by transnational ideas and strategies are undergoing different developments in the region.
This article does not intend to provide a deep analysis of the different dynamics of vernacularization and the particularities of each political context. We do not intend to go deeper in demonstrating the transnational dynamics and coordinating forces behind those processes, nor cover all Latin American countries. However, by following some national cases, we evidenced that there is something new and orchestrated going on in the anti-abortion field in the region. Thus, we do aim to call attention to the formation of a clear general pattern and to the need for more empirical research to deepen our understanding of how the “anti ‘gender ideology’ crusades” ( CORRÊA, 2017CORRÊA, Sônia. Gender Ideology: Tracking its Origins and Meanings in Current Gender Politics. The London School of Economics and Political Science, Nov. 12, 2017. Available at: https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/gender/2017/12/11/gender-ideology-tracking-its-origins-and-meanings-in-current-gender-politics/. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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) spread in Latin America, as well as how they interact with a complex and multidimensional local process that encompasses a diversity of actors and networks by creatively making choices and decisions about strategies, arenas, and frameworks, in addition to adapting them to local socio-cultural and political contexts.
We will proceed as follows. Section one presents the relational theoretical framework we used to understand the phenomenon, which allowed us to see the renovation of the anti-abortion field in the region longitudinally as a reaction to previous threats and advances of feminist, pro-abortion, and LGBTQ+ movements. Section two presents an overview of the main innovations regarding actors and alliances of several countries in the region, which indicates shifts in the profiles of organizations and actors, in addition to the expansion of the anti-abortion network toward party politics and civil society mobilization vis-à-vis the previous centrality of the Catholic Church. Sections three and four analyze the diversification of the repertoire of actions used by anti-abortion actors, such as campaigns, incidence on electoral cycles, and street protests, calling attention to the increasing prominence of legal mobilization strategies and rights frameworks. Finally, section five highlights the use of “gender ideology” as a master framework that redefines the borders of the field itself and boosts alliances across different movements engaged in the defense of a conservative sexual morality under the idea that “gender ideology” threats traditional family values. While the limits of this article do not allow us to go deep into each case study, we hope that the examples pinpointed hereto flag the shifts taking place in the Latin-American anti-abortion field, signaling its expansion and strengthening. Finally, we aim to call attention to the need for more in-depth studies of neoconservative mobilization and alliances to broaden the understanding of the current challenges faced by sexual and reproductive policies in the region.
1. MOVEMENTS AND COUNTERMOVEMENTS’ DYNAMICS: THE ANTI-ABORTION REACTION TO SEXUAL AND REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS
In a contextual and relational approach to political conflict, the confrontation between social movements and their opponents generates a chain of actions and reactions, in which mobilizations and achievements of each side change the balance of opportunities, restrictions, and threats for the other one, triggering a reaction ( USEEM and ZALD, 1982USEEM, Bert; ZALD, Mayer N. From Pressure Group to Social Movement: Organizational Dilemmas of the Effort to Promote Nuclear Power. Social Problems , [ s.l. ], v. 30, n. 2, p. 144-156, 1982. ; BANASZAK and ONDERCIN, 2010BANASZAK, Lee Ann; ONDERCIN, Heather L. Explaining Movement and Countermovement Events in the Contemporary US Women’s Movement . [ S.l. ], 2010. Available at: https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1668884. Accessed on: April 13, 2022.
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; MEYER and STAGGENBORG, 1996MEYER, David S.; STAGGENBORG, Suzanne. Movements, Countermovements, and the Structure of Political Opportunity. American Journal of Sociology , [ s.l .], v. 101, n. 6, p. 1628-1660, 1996. ; DELLA PORTA and DIANI, 2006DELLA PORTA, Donatella; DIANI, Mario. Social Movements: An Introduction. New Jersey: Wiley, 2006. 360 p. ). Understanding the relational approach of contentious politics does not mean that backlash is decisive or that backfire reactions are always able to reverse conquests ( CORREDOR, 2021CORREDOR, Elizabeth. On the Strategic Uses of Women’s Rights: Backlash, Rights-based Framing, and Anti-Gender Campaigns in Colombia’s 2016 Peace Agreement. Latin American Politics and Society , [ s.l. ], v. 63, n. 3, p. 46-68, 2021. ). We aim to locate the process of renovation and reorganization of the anti-abortion field as a reaction to victories by feminist and LGBTIQ+ groups in different instances, both in international and domestic arenas ( VAGGIONE, 2005VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Reactive Politicization and Religious Dissidence: The Political Mutations of the Religious. Social Theory and Practice , [ s.l. ], v. 31, n. 2, p. 165-188, Apr. 2005. Available at: https://doi.org/10.5840/soctheorpract200531210. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.5840/soctheorpract200...
; RUIBAL, 2014RUIBAL, Alba M. Movement and Counter-Movement: A History of Abortion Law Reform and the Backlash in Colombia 2006-2014. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 42-51, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44803-1. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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). On the international front, even with the presence of conservative alliances in UN conferences and several strategies employed by the Vatican, they could not avoid various victories by the feminist movement: the UN Conference in Vienna (1993) launched the women’s human rights framework and supported measures to address violence against women; the UN Conference on Population and Development (Cairo, 1994) reaffirmed women’s rights as human rights, and moved the control of fertility from the demographic matrix to reproductive rights with the word gender appearing for the first time in an official international document; the Fourth World Conference on Women (Beijing, 1995) reassured women’s right to “control all aspects of their health, especially their own fertility” ( FRANCO, 1998FRANCO, Jean. The Long March of Feminism. NACLA Report on the Americas , [ s.l. ], v. 31, n. 4, p. 10-15, 1998. ).
The defeat of anti-abortion forces in the UN Conferences set in motion counteractions in the anti-abortion field transnationally ( LEMAITRE, 2014LEMAITRE, Julieta Ripoll. Catholic Constitucionalism on Sex, Women, and the Beginning of Life. In: COOK, Rebecca J.; ERDMAN, Joanna N.; DICKENS, Bernard M. Abortion Law in Transnational Perspective: Cases and Controversies. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014. p. 239-257. ). After Cairo and on the eve of the Beijing Conference, Pope John Paul II launched the Encyclical Evangelium Vitae (Gospel of Life) to denounce the “culture of death” promoted by international institutions. The document called on Catholics to organize and target legislators and to consider women who have once aborted, especially the poorest ones, as victims of social circumstances and scientific misinformation about the beginning of life.
Meanwhile, UN World Conferences served as tools to boost mobilization in domestic arenas. A new generation of globalized women’s organizations and activists were forged in the conferences and the many fora promoted by them ( ALVAREZ, 1997ALVAREZ, Sonia. Articulación y transnacionalización de los feminismos latinoamericanos. Debate Feminista , [ s. l. ], año 8, v. 15, p. 1-16, 1997. ). Those activists, deeply connected in a transnational advocacy network, managed to use international resources and framework to mobilize and advance the reproductive rights agenda domestically through grassroots strategies, courts, health guidelines, and bills of law ( MONTAÑO, 1996MONTAÑO, Sonia. Los derechos reproductivos de la mujer. In: GUZMÁN, Laura; PACHECO, Gilda (comps.). Estudios Básicos de Derechos Humanos IV . San José: IIDH, 1996. p. 163-183. ).
The UN Conferences were also used as spaces of transnational connection for the anti-abortion coalition, which included the Vatican, the Catholic States, pro-life US politicians, and the US-based organization Human Life International (HLI). HLI started to fund lobby campaigns, partner with local institutions (such as Pro Vida Mexico), and create local chapters across Latin America throughout the 90s. This transnational anti-abortion network developed its expansion in Latin America and was an important structure for streamlining the reaction to the sexual and reproductive rights paradigm.
The rearrangement of the field happened at different paces, through various configurations and particularities, depending on local processes of vernacularization. Moreover, domestic anti-abortion mobilizations were also connected to other political processes and contexts, for example, the rise of Christian politicians in several countries in the region and, in some cases, the rise of a broader right-wing populist wave in response to an array of factors, from corruption scandals to inequality, public safety issues and economic stress ( BOB, 2012BOB, Clifford. The Global Right Wing and the Clash of World Politics . New York: Cambridge University Press, 1. ed., 2012. 242 p. ).
In this sense, the position of actors in the field, the alliances, as well as the legal and political balance of opportunities at a local level are crucial to understand why and how transnational trends find their way through national political processes, why they are more successful in some countries than others, and why the recent strengthening of anti-gender advocacy does not manage to simply revert conquered rights. By analyzing the trajectories of abortion battles in the countries across Latin America, we see a variation in regulations, as well as a shifting and volatile scenario. The most recent developments in Argentina, Mexico, and Colombia2 2 In Argentina, since 2021, abortion is allowed until the fourteenth gestational week. After that, it is only permitted in case of rape or to preserve the woman’s health or life. In Mexico, in 2021, the Supreme Court issued a decision that allows abortion within a short period of time (early pregnancy). In Colombia, in 2022, the Constitutional Court issued a decision that allows abortion until the twenty-fourth gestational week. Cf. Center for Reproductive Rights (2021). brought new hopes to the region; while in the opposite direction, many countries are still dealing with the reality or the threat of total bans on abortion.3 3 In Latin America and in the Caribbean, there are laws that impose the total prohibition of abortion in Suriname, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, and Haiti ( CENTER FOR REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS, 2021 ). Such heterogeneity is explained by the complex and different socio-political contexts and domestic balances of legal and political opportunity structures. In this article, rather than following each political process, we are more interested in finding common traces of innovation inside the anti-abortion field in different contexts, catalyzed by a transnational process of circulation of new repertoires set in motion by the anti-abortion defeat in Cairo ( LEMAITRE, 2014LEMAITRE, Julieta Ripoll. Catholic Constitucionalism on Sex, Women, and the Beginning of Life. In: COOK, Rebecca J.; ERDMAN, Joanna N.; DICKENS, Bernard M. Abortion Law in Transnational Perspective: Cases and Controversies. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014. p. 239-257. ).
2. DIVERSIFICATION OF ACTORS AND RECONFIGURATION OF ALLIANCES TOWARDS PARTY POLITICS AND CIVIL SOCIETY MOBILIZATION
The specialized literature shows the long-standing presence and key role occupied by the Catholic Church in disputes over sexual politics across Latin America, the most Catholic continent of the world ( HTUN, 2003HTUN, Mala. Sex and the State: Abortion, Divorce, and the Family under Latin American Dictatorships and Democracies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. 232 p. ; VAGGIONE, 2005VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Reactive Politicization and Religious Dissidence: The Political Mutations of the Religious. Social Theory and Practice , [ s.l. ], v. 31, n. 2, p. 165-188, Apr. 2005. Available at: https://doi.org/10.5840/soctheorpract200531210. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.5840/soctheorpract200...
; LEMAITRE, 2013LEMAITRE, Julieta Ripoll. Laicidad y resistencia: Movilización católica contra los derechos sexuales y reproductivos en América Latina. Colección de Cuadernos Jorge Carpizo: Para Entender y Pensar la Laicidade, Ciudad de México, n. 6, 2013. 71 p. ; RUIBAL, 2014RUIBAL, Alba M. Movement and Counter-Movement: A History of Abortion Law Reform and the Backlash in Colombia 2006-2014. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 42-51, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44803-1. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44...
; PEÑAS DEFAGO and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2014PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Conservative Litigation against Sexual and Reproductive Health Policies in Argentina. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 82-90, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44805-5. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44...
; VAGGIONE and MACHADO, 2020VAGGIONE, Juan Marco; MACHADO, Maria das Dores Campos. Religious Patterns of Neoconservatism in Latin America. Politics & Gender , England, v. 16, n. 1, Mar. 2020. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743923X20000082. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743923X2000008...
). However, the field has recently undergone significant changes, amplifying the alliances and diversifying the profile of activists and organizations. In a field formerly dominated and led by the Catholic Church, we now see an assortment of actors – other churches (mainly Evangelical Churches), pro-life and pro-family NGOs, Christian politicians, and professional organizations (such as pro-life lawyers or doctors), research centers and think tanks.
Catholics and Evangelicals4
4
In this article, we used the general term “Evangelical” without ignoring the fact it is actually less uniform than it looks and is composed of different churches. In recent years, many Protestants and Pentecostals have preferred to identify themselves by the specific name of their denomination and by the generic term “Christian” ( ALMEIDA, 2017 ).
have historically experienced tensions with each other (rooted in many cases in the Catholic Church’s privileges). Their competition has been acute in Latin America, where the emergence and spread of the Evangelical Churches from the Neopentecostal movement in the 2000s had an impact on the Catholic audience ( RELIGION..., 2014RELIGION in Latin America: Widespread change in a Historically Catholic Region. Pew Research Center , Nov. 13, 2014. Available at: https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2014/11/13/religion-in-latin-america/. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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). However, their shared resistance to sexual and reproductive rights enabled the creation of a common agenda. Advances in sexual and reproductive rights in national and international arenas prompted the alliance, both on transnational and local scales. Catholics and Evangelicals did not become allies only in international forums ( SAMUEL, 2007SAMUEL, June. Adapting to Norms at the United Nations: Abortion-Rights and Anti-Abortion Networks. Dissertation (Master in Political Science) – Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, 2007. Available at: https://drum.lib.umd.edu/handle/1903/7634?show=full. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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). In several Latin American countries, both sectors have coordinated actions and statements against a more pluralistic sexual agenda ( SANTANA, 2020SANTANA, Ailynn Torres (ed.). Derechos en Riesgo en América Latina . Bogotá: Ediciones desde Abajo/Fundación Rosa Luxemburgo, 2020. ). In Argentina, for instance, in the years of 2018 and 2020, the Catholic Church and different Evangelical Churches came together in different public actions to oppose the congressional debate over the legalization of abortion ( LÓPEZ and LOZA, 2021LÓPEZ, Magdalena; LOZA, Jorgelina. Articulaciones, representaciones y estrategias de la movilización contra la interrupción voluntaria del embarazo en Argentina (2018-2020). Población & Sociedad , [ s.l. ], v. 28, n. 1, p. 131-161, 2021. ). Before that, they also forged a series of alliances to oppose same-sex marriage, which were legalized by Argentina in 2010 ( VAGGIONE and JONES, 2015VAGGIONE, Juan Marco; JONES, Daniel. La política sexual y las creencias religiosas: El debate por el matrimonio para las parejas del mismo sexo (Argentina, 2010). Revista de Estudios Sociales , n. 51, p. 105-117, Jan./Mar. 2015. Available at: https://journals.openedition.org/revestudsoc/8832. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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). In Brazil, a cross-religious and cross-party alliance was formed in 2006 ( MACIEL and MACHADO, 2017MACIEL, Debora Alves; MACHADO, Marta Rodriguez de Assis. A arte da associação conservadora: o ativismo antiaborto no Brasil. Manuscript presented in the Department of Political Science, USP, 2017. ).
The anti-abortion alliance with the Evangelical Church created a gateway to party politics. Evangelical Churches have been increasingly disputing electoral positions with Christian politicians and parliamentary alliances across the region. Over the last twenty years, Evangelical representatives have entered party politics and evidenced an increasing presence in parliaments in Argentina, Bolivia, Costa Rica, Brazil, Chile, Honduras, El Salvador, Mexico, and Peru, among other countries ( PASSARINHO, 2019PASSARINHO, Nathalia. Cómo las iglesias evangélicas han logrado ganar tanto peso en la política de América Latina. BBC , [ s.l. ], 27 nov. 2019. Available at: https://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-america-latina-50535984. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://www.bbc.com/mundo/noticias-ameri...
; HINZ, VINUTO and COUTINHO, 2020HINZ, Kristina; VINUTO, Juliana; COUTINHO, Aline Beatriz. Por Dios y por las armas: el ascenso neopentecostal y securitario en Brasil (2003-2019). Revista CIDOB d’Afers Internacionals , [ s.l. ], n. 126, p. 185-213, 2020. ). In fact, the emergence of confessional Evangelical political parties in several Latin American countries is considered as the main novelty in party systems that changed very little during the continent’s re-democratization processes initiated in the 1980s ( SILVA, 2018SILVA, Hélerson. Os novos atores “evangélicos” e a conquista do espaço público na América Latina. Reflexão , [ s.l. ], v. 43, n. 2, p. 243-263, 2018. Available at: https://doi.org/10.24220/2447-6803v43n2a4377. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.24220/2447-6803v43n2a...
; MARIANO and GERARDI, 2019MARIANO, Ricardo; GERARDI, Dirceu André. Eleições presidenciais na América Latina em 2018 e ativismo político de evangélicos conservadores. Revista USP , São Paulo, n. 120, p. 61-76, 2019. https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2316-9036.v0i120p61-76
https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2316-9036....
; SMITH, 2019SMITH, Amy Erica. Religion and Brazilian Democracy: Mobilizing the People of God. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019. ). One of the main agendas—and often the foundation of the party platform—pursued by Evangelical and Christian lawmakers is the battle against gender and LGBTQ+ rights ( JONES and CARBONELLI, 2012JONES, Daniel Eduardo; CARBONELLI, Marcos Andrés. Evangélicos y derechos sexuales y reproductivos: Actores y lógicas políticas en la Argentina contemporánea. Ciências Sociais Unisinos , São Leopoldo, v. 48, n. 3, p. 225-234, 2012. ). In Paraguay and Brazil, both of the two elected presidents in 2018, respectively Mario Abdo Benítez and Jair Bolsonaro articulated speeches against LGBTQ+ rights and abortion. They received the strong support of conservative Christian movements. In Brazil, at least since the last decade, Evangelical and pro-life congressional representatives were already influential forces in Parliament and had efficiently blocked the expansion of reproductive and LGBTQ+ rights through legislation. In Costa Rica, opposition to LGBTQ+ rights was boosted among Evangelical groups after the Interamerican Court of Human Rights decision that obliged the State to ensure equal rights to same-sex marriage ( MORGAN, 2021aMORGAN, Lynn. Costa Rica’s Oversized Role in Latin American Sexual and Reproductive Rights Lawfare. Revista Direito GV , São Paulo, v. 17, n. 3, e2137, set./dez. 2021a. Available at: https://bibliotecadigital.fgv.br/ojs/index.php/revdireitogv/article/view/85240. Accessed on: April 18, 2022.
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). The Evangelicals’ reaction led Fabricio Alvarado, a gospel singer and TV presenter, to significantly rise in the pools (from 3% to 25%), even though he did not eventually win ( MACEDO and JACOBUCCI, 2020MACEDO, Julia Assmann de Freitas, JACOBUCCI, Fabrízio Conte. Populism and the Evangelical Church in Latin America: How anti-LGBTI Forces Tried to Stop the Colombian Peace Agreement. Revista de Direito Internacional , Brasilia, v. 17, n. 2, p. 100-119, 2020. Available at: https://doi.org/10.5102/rdi.v17i2.6685. Accessed on: April 18, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.5102/rdi.v17i2.6685...
). Despite different levels of success, the new trend identified in various countries is the forged alliances between religious institutions, mainly Evangelical, and traditional political parties that share their moral and political agenda ( VAGGIONE and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2021VAGGIONE, Juan Marco; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Neoconservative incursions into Party Politics: The case of Argentina and Chile. In: SUTTON, Barbara; VACAREZZA, Nayla Luz. Abortion and Democracy: Contentious Body Politics in Argentina, Chile and Uruguay. New York: Routledge, 2021. ; SANDOVAL and ASCARZA, 2021SANDOVAL, Melina; ASCARZA, Lucero. Congreso 2021: “Antiderechos e implicados en ‘Vacunagate’ entre los más votados”. Saludconlup , [ s.l. ], 14 abr. 2021. Available at: https://saludconlupa.com/noticias/congreso-2021-antiderechos-e-implicados-en-vacunagate-entre-los-mas-votados/. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://saludconlupa.com/noticias/congre...
).
Furthermore, new political actors were evidenced and gained importance by connecting civil society actors and party politics. After the 2018 legislative debate on abortion in Argentina, a new political party—the Blue Party—was created. The Blue Party is the first political party in Argentina whose main objective is to promote “the protection and defense of human life from conception to natural death.”5 5 See Partido Celeste (s.d.). The party is supported by Catholic and Evangelical leaders, pro-life NGOs, former legislators, and national officials. An interesting aspect of their political platform is their perspective on the state’s economic and social role ( MORÁN FAÚNDES and PEÑAS DEFAGO, 2020MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel; PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica. Una mirada regional de las articulaciones neoconservadoras. Rupturas y continuidades transnacionales. In: SANTANA, Ailynn Torres (ed.). Derechos en Riesgo en América Latina: 11 estudios sobre grupos neoconservadores. Bogotá: Ediciones desde Abajo/Fundación Rosa Luxemburgo, 2020. p. 241-270. ), clarifying the alliance between moral conservatives and neoliberalism. They support a free-market model and reduce the state’s essential functions to lower the fiscal deficit. The budgetary deficit is related to the idea that external debt would motivate the state to follow anti-natalist and pro-abortion policies. The creation of this type of political party is not exclusive to Argentina. The Republican Party was created in Chile, 2019, and presented similar principals and policy platforms ( MORÁN FAÚNDES and PEÑAS DEFAGO, 2020MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel; PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica. Una mirada regional de las articulaciones neoconservadoras. Rupturas y continuidades transnacionales. In: SANTANA, Ailynn Torres (ed.). Derechos en Riesgo en América Latina: 11 estudios sobre grupos neoconservadores. Bogotá: Ediciones desde Abajo/Fundación Rosa Luxemburgo, 2020. p. 241-270. ).6 6 See Partido Republicano (s.d.).
In Brazil, the Evangelical presence in congress has significantly increased since 2014, with an amount of 85 Congressmen in the House of Representatives and seven senators elected in 2018 ( DEPARTAMENTO INTERSINDICAL DE ASSESSORIA PARLAMENTAR, 2018DEPARTAMENTO INTERSINDICAL DE ASSESSORIA PARLAMENTAR. Radiografia do Novo Congresso: Legislatura 2019-2023. Brasilia: DIAP, 2018. (Estudos Políticos do DIAP). Available at: https://www.diap.org.br/index.php/publicacoes/send/13-radiografia-do-novo-congresso/962-radiografia-do-novo-congresso-legislatura-2019-2023. Accessed on: April 11, 2022.
https://www.diap.org.br/index.php/public...
), parliamentary caucuses became crucial in organizing the conservative opposition. Parliamentary caucuses have played a particular role in the creation of the current conservative obstacle in Parliament – nicknamed “BBB caucus”, Boi (cattle), Bullet and the Bible ( QUADROS and MADEIRA, 2018QUADROS, Marcos Paulo dos Reis; MADEIRA, Rafael Machado. Fim da direita envergonhada? Atuação da bancada evangélica e da bancada da bala e os caminhos da representação do conservadorismo no Brasil. Opinião Pública , Campinas, v. 24, n. 3, p. 486-522, set./dez. 2018. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1590/1807-01912018243486. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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) – a coalition that currently blocks any advance in the sexual and reproductive agenda. Parliamentary fronts or caucuses have existed in Brazil for a long time as institutionally loose structures that congregate politicians from different parties and ideologies around a common interest, such as business people, the agricultural sector, and the transportation sector ( LOPES, 2013LOPES, Noemi Araujo. A frente parlamentar evangélica: e sua atuação na Câmara dos Deputados. Orientador: David Verge Fleischer. 2013. 111 f. Trabalho de Conclusão de Curso (Bacharelado em Ciência Política) – Graduação em Ciência Política, Universidade de Brasília (UnB), Brasilia, 2013. Available at: https://bdm.unb.br/bitstream/10483/7140/1/2013_NoemiAraujoLopes.pdf. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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). Since its creation in 2003, the Parliamentary Evangelical Caucus has forced taxations for churches as well as for sexual and moral issues, with anti-abortion bills as a primary object of action. A specific anti-abortion caucus was formed in 2006, and a pro-life and pro-family parliamentary caucus was created in 2019. These caucuses often work in alliance with each other, joining forces with other conservative caucuses. Parliamentary caucuses and their great influence are specific to the Brazilian context. The fact is that, by using different configurations, anti-abortion activism has joined electoral disputes and party politics in anti-abortion and anti-gender battles, and has become an important tool for gaining voters who are prone to populism, especially among Christian conservatives.
But this was not the only innovation in the reconfiguration of the anti-abortion field. Besides joining party politics and the parliamentary arena, coalitions between churches and civil society actors have increasingly occupied public spaces. In response to the positive results achieved by the feminist and LGBTIQ+ movements in international conferences and national policies in many countries in the region, new organizations were founded on the civil society front, beyond the structures managed by the churches. This process of conservative “NGOization” of neo-conservatism ( VAGGIONE, 2005VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Reactive Politicization and Religious Dissidence: The Political Mutations of the Religious. Social Theory and Practice , [ s.l. ], v. 31, n. 2, p. 165-188, Apr. 2005. Available at: https://doi.org/10.5840/soctheorpract200531210. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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) has evolved in different directions. Although the first conservative NGOs identified themselves as having Catholic roots, in recent years a series of similar NGOs have also emerged in the Evangelical field ( VILLAZÓN, 2014VILLAZÓN, Julio Córdova. Viejas y nuevas derechas religiosas en América Latina: Los evangélicos como factor político. Nueva Sociedad , [ s.l. ], n. 254, p. 112-123, nov./dic. 2014. ; MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2015MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. El desarrollo del activismo autodenominado “pro-vida” en Argentina, 1980-2014. Revista Mexicana de Sociología , [ s.l. ], v. 77, n. 3, p. 407-435, 2015. ; PEÑAS DEFAGO and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2016PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Strategies of Self-Proclaimed Pro-Life Groups in Argentina: effect of new religious actors on sexual policies. Latin American Perspectives , [ s.l. ], v. 43, n. 3, p. 144-162, 2016. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0094582X15628022. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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). Some of them are confessional but not necessarily linked to the structure of the churches. Others were completely originated from religious references using pro-family frames or presenting themselves as bioethical institutes, think tanks, scientific-educational, and professional organizations, such as pro-life doctors or lawyers ( SIVERINO BAVIO, 2013SIVERINO BAVIO, Paula. Bioética y derechos humanos: La bioética ‘confesional’ como estrategia. In: VAGGIONE, Juan Marco; MUJICA, Jaris. Conservadurismos, religión y política: Perspectivas de investigación en América Latina. Córdoba: Ferreyra/CIECS, 2013. p. 195-236. ; IRRAZÁBAL, 2011IRRAZÁBAL, Gabriela. La bioética como entrenamiento y facilitadora de la influencia de agentes católicos en el espacio público en Argentina. Revista del Centro de Investigación de la Universidad La Salle , Ciudad de México, v. 9, n. 36, p. 5-23, 2011. ; MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2015MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. El desarrollo del activismo autodenominado “pro-vida” en Argentina, 1980-2014. Revista Mexicana de Sociología , [ s.l. ], v. 77, n. 3, p. 407-435, 2015. ). As Vaggione (2005)VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Reactive Politicization and Religious Dissidence: The Political Mutations of the Religious. Social Theory and Practice , [ s.l. ], v. 31, n. 2, p. 165-188, Apr. 2005. Available at: https://doi.org/10.5840/soctheorpract200531210. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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points out, the adoption of a secular position is a strategy for achieving greater influence in the public debate and penetrating spaces to which access would be difficult with a discourse expressly based on faith and religious dogma.
In Brazil, the national movement Brazil without Abortion – National Movement of Citizens for Life (Brasil Sem Aborto – Movimento Nacional da Cidadania pela Vida), created in 2006, is a self-declared supra-party and supra-religious organization, which presents itself as a group of “professors, students, lawyers, religious and community leaders, jurists and renowned scientists” who work “in a structured way to guide actions and arguments based on evidence and research in the field of genetics, embryology, bioethics, and on current legislation” ( BRASIL SEM ABORTO, s.d.BRASIL SEM ABORTO – MOVIMENTO NACIONAL DA CIDADANIA PELA VIDA. Quem somos? , [ s.l. ], [ s.d. ]. Available at: https://www.brasilsemaborto.org/quem-somos/. Accessed on: April 13, 2022.
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). This is a clear statement of its societal roots and its anchoring both in science and law. Other examples in the region of these NGOs are Frente Jóven (Argentina, Peru, Ecuador, and Paraguay), the MELISA Institute (Chile), Centro de Bioética, Persona y Familia (Argentina), the NGO Desarrollo Familiar Población (Guatemala), Centro de Investigaciones Sociales Avanzadas (Mexico), among others ( MORÁN FAÚNDES et al. , 2015MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. El desarrollo del activismo autodenominado “pro-vida” en Argentina, 1980-2014. Revista Mexicana de Sociología , [ s.l. ], v. 77, n. 3, p. 407-435, 2015. ; GIANELLA-MALCA, 2018GIANELLA-MALCA, Camila. Movimiento transnacional contra el derecho al aborto en América Latina. In: BERGALLO, Paola; SIERRA, Isabel Cristina Jaramillo; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco (eds.). El aborto en América Latina: estrategias jurídicas para luchar por su legalización y enfrentar las resistencias conservadoras. Buenos Aires: Siglo XXI Editores, 2018, p. 351-378. ).
These organizations have also demonstrated remarkable transnational organizational capacity. Since the 1990s, international pro-life NGOs such as Human Life International have influenced and provided mobilization expertise for local organizations across the region ( PEÑAS DEFAGO and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2014PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Conservative Litigation against Sexual and Reproductive Health Policies in Argentina. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 82-90, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44805-5. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44...
). The foundation of new organizations connected to transnational activism increased throughout the region in the last decade. In 2008, the organization Parlamento & Fe (Parliament & Faith) was created in Argentina as an international movement. One of their primary purposes is: “consolidate management teams in each country to promote the eternal values to and through the rulers” (PARLAMENTO & FE, 2020). The transnational scope of legal mobilization also became clear. For example, in the case of Gretel Artavia Murillo et al. v. Costa Rica , ruled by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in 2012, in which more than 16 amici curiae were presented by conservative actors ( LEMAITRE, SIEDER, 2017LEMAITRE, Julieta Ripoll; SIEDER, Rachel. The Moderating Influence of International Courts on Social Movements: Evidence from the IVF Case against Costa Rica. Health and Human Rights Journal , [ s.l. ], v. 19, n. 1, p. 149-160, 2017. ). Among them, we find leading transnational anti-abortion organizations, such as ADF International (Alliance Defending Freedom, formerly Alliance Defense Fund), the Center for Legal Studies at C-Fam, and Americans United for Life.
The analysis of different cases allows us to see the renovation of anti-abortion alliances in a two-pronged strategy —the partnership with Christian politicians and Evangelical Churches to influence electoral and parliamentary politics; and the rooting of anti-abortion efforts in civil society. The two axis are well articulated and complimentary, as strong social mobilization in civil society, comprising the organization of protests, marches, campaigns, study groups, philanthropic organizations, etc., and it is also a channel to electoral politics. Under the pro-life and pro-family scope, the anti-abortion movement has promoted alliances among political actors from different parties and interests, as well as civil society organizations, and churches. The alliance between political representation and societal mobilization has significantly empowered the anti-abortion agenda, which gained even more coverage with strategic movements towards secular discourses and the emulation of progressive movements’ strategies.
3. TOWARDS A LARGER ANTI-ABORTION REPERTOIRE OF ACTIONS
While the Catholic Church has been the main actor in the anti-abortion movement, its main mobilization strategy has been to pressure parliamentarians and other political authorities to influence public policies ( VAGGIONE, 2012VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. La “cultura de la vida”: Desplazamientos estratégicos del activismo Católico conservador frente a los derechos sexuales y reproductivos. Religião e Sociedade , Rio de Janeiro, v. 32, n. 2, p. 57-80, 2012. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-85872012000200004. Accessed on: April 14 abr. 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-8587201200...
; LEMAITRE, 2013LEMAITRE, Julieta Ripoll. Laicidad y resistencia: Movilización católica contra los derechos sexuales y reproductivos en América Latina. Colección de Cuadernos Jorge Carpizo: Para Entender y Pensar la Laicidade, Ciudad de México, n. 6, 2013. 71 p. ). It was an invisible backstage work of authorities. As new actors have come onto the scene (such as Evangelicals and NGOs), a different repertoire emerged. The anti-abortion field was taken by the diversification and combination of its strategies, such as litigation, public campaigns, and street mobilizations. Moreover, advocacy before the legislative and executive branches has become more organic due to the Christian politicians, who have created parties, occupied seats in parliament and other public positions, and started to operate within state structures.
From Mexico to Argentina, abortion rights have gained remarkable salience and traction in political campaigns and party politics, with candidates and political leaders regularly publicly stating their positions regarding abortion ( GIANELLA-MALCA et al. , 2017GIANELLA-MALCA, Camila; MACHADO, Marta Rodriguez de Assis; PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica. What Causes Latin America’s High Incidence of Adolescent Pregnancy? CMI Brief , [ s.l. ], v. 16, n. 9, p. 1-4, 2017. ), and facing orchestrated political attacks from economic and religious elites if they support abortion rights ( VITERNA, 2012VITERNA, Jocelyn. The Left and “Life” in El Salvador. Politics & Gender , [ s.l. ], v. 8, n. 2, p. 248-254, Jun. 2012. Available at: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/politics-and-gender/article/left-and-life-in-el-salvador/C8B5484246F56116CCD9C29A43692F4F. Accessed on: June 30, 2022.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/...
). Governments that have advanced or openly defended legal abortion rights in the face of mobilized opposition have suffered electoral setbacks and damage to their ratings. In countries like El Salvador and Nicaragua, anti-abortion mobilizations encouraged political parties historically associated with the revolutionary Left to eschew traditional concerns for equality and religious freedom by making alliances with the Catholic Church, instead ( VITERNA, 2012VITERNA, Jocelyn. The Left and “Life” in El Salvador. Politics & Gender , [ s.l. ], v. 8, n. 2, p. 248-254, Jun. 2012. Available at: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/politics-and-gender/article/left-and-life-in-el-salvador/C8B5484246F56116CCD9C29A43692F4F. Accessed on: June 30, 2022.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/...
and 2017). Since 2006, such campaigns have been used in Brazil (with the campaign “Vote for Life; Vote for a Candidate Who Defends Life”), when anti-abortion actors succeeded in highlighting the issue at the center of the electoral agenda, as well as in the elections in 2010, 2014, and 2018. In Peru, the same type of campaign has been used in the 2011 and 2016 electoral campaigns, and leading anti-abortion activists played a central role in the mobilization against the 2016 democratically elected government.
Elections have been used as important moments for connecting different strategies, whereby pro-life campaigns support the election of Evangelical or pro-life congresspeople. In Colombia, mobilizations based on anti-gender ideology were used in the “No campaign” against the peace agreement with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) in the national referendum, although it also represented other interests, such as concerns around land rights and the war on crime ( CORREDOR, 2021CORREDOR, Elizabeth. On the Strategic Uses of Women’s Rights: Backlash, Rights-based Framing, and Anti-Gender Campaigns in Colombia’s 2016 Peace Agreement. Latin American Politics and Society , [ s.l. ], v. 63, n. 3, p. 46-68, 2021. ). Electoral processes are becoming highly polarized in Argentina, Brazil, Chile, El Salvador, and Peru, and presidents are often elected in runoffs by the slimmest of margins. Religious conservative actors in the legislative branch have gained political power to negotiate directly with the executive ( VITERNA, 2012VITERNA, Jocelyn. The Left and “Life” in El Salvador. Politics & Gender , [ s.l. ], v. 8, n. 2, p. 248-254, Jun. 2012. Available at: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/politics-and-gender/article/left-and-life-in-el-salvador/C8B5484246F56116CCD9C29A43692F4F. Accessed on: June 30, 2022.
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/...
; PECHENY et al. , 2011PECHENY, Mario et al. ‘Yo no soy progre, soy peronista’. ¿Por qué es tan difícil discutir políticamente sobre aborto? In: BERGALLO, Paola (ed.). Aborto y justicia reproductiva . Buenos Aires: Editores del Puerto, 2011. ; GIANELLA-MALCA, 2017GIANELLA-MALCA, Camila. Abortion Rights Legal Mobilization in the Peruvian Media, 1990-2015. Health and Human Rights Journal, [ s.l. ], v. 19, n. 1, p. 133-148, 2017. ; MACIEL and MACHADO, 2017MACIEL, Debora Alves; MACHADO, Marta Rodriguez de Assis. A arte da associação conservadora: o ativismo antiaborto no Brasil. Manuscript presented in the Department of Political Science, USP, 2017. ). In the 2010 Brazilian Presidential election, for example, the then-candidate Dilma Rousseff was pressed to sign a “Letter to the People of God” due to her previous position on abortion rights, commiting herself not to advance abortion rights if elected.
Conservative politicians and political parties are well connected with societal mobilization. Recent studies identified the increased use of grassroots mobilization repertoires by right-wing and neoconservative movements during the conservative shift in the 2010s. Among other themes, such as gun rights, demand for law and order (“mano dura”) policies, and anti-corruption reforms, the opposition to gender and sexual equality policies is identified as an important trigger of such mobilizations ( MAYKA and SMITH, 2021MAYKA, Lindsay; SMITH, Amy Erica. Introduction The Grassroots Right in Latin America: Patterns, Causes and Consequences. Latin American Politics and Society , [ s.l .], v. 63, n. 3, p. 1-20, 2021. ; REUTERSWÄRD, 2021REUTERSWÄRD, Camilla. Pro-Life and Feminist Mobilization in the Struggle over Abortion in Mexico: Church Networks, Elite Alliances, and Partisan Context. Latin American Politics and Society , [ s.l. ], v. 63, n. 3, p. 21-45, Aug. 2021. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1017/lap.2021.21. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1017/lap.2021.21...
; CORREDOR, 2021CORREDOR, Elizabeth. On the Strategic Uses of Women’s Rights: Backlash, Rights-based Framing, and Anti-Gender Campaigns in Colombia’s 2016 Peace Agreement. Latin American Politics and Society , [ s.l. ], v. 63, n. 3, p. 46-68, 2021. ; DIAS, VON BÜLOW, and GOBBI, 2021DIAS, Tayrine; VON BÜLOW, Marisa; GOBBI, Danniel. Populist Framing Mechanisms and the Rise of Right-wing Activism in Brazil. Latin American Politics and Society , [ s.l. ], v. 63, n. 3, p. 69-92, 2021. ; GOLD and PEÑA, 2021GOLD, Tomás; PEÑA, Alejandro M. The Rise of the Contentious Right: Digitally Intermediated Linkage Strategies in Argentina and Brazil. Latin American Politics and Society , [ s.l. ], v. 63, n. 3, p. 93-118, 2021. ).
The development of a protest politics routine became evident through the convening of marches, walks, protests, and blockades in front of courts, public buildings, hospitals, etc. in several countries across the region. In El Salvador (1997) and Nicaragua (2007), the pro-life movements (consisting of parliamentarians and members of civil society) have succeeded in convening hundreds of thousands of protesters for marches in support of bills to introduce absolute abortion bans ( FEUSIER, 2012FEUSIER, Oswaldo. El delito de aborto frente a un derecho penal garantista. 2012. Tesis (Maestría en Derecho Penal) – Universidad Centroamericana José Simeón, El Salvador, 2012. ). The Brazil without Abortion movement (“Brasil sem Aborto”) facilitates massive annual marches at the headquarters of the Federal Government by bringing together several small, local pro-life and pro-family organizations dispersed throughout the country ( REZENDE, 2016REZENDE, Patricia Jimenez. Movimentos sociais e contramovimentos: Mobilizações antiaborto no Brasil contemporâneo. 2016. Dissertação (Mestrado em Ciências Sociais) – Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Escola de Filosofia, Letras e Ciências Humanas, Guarulhos, 2016. Available at: https://repositorio.unifesp.br/bitstream/handle/11600/46119/Disserta%c3%a7%c3%a3o_REZENDE%2c%202016.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y. Accessed on: October 24, 2022.
https://repositorio.unifesp.br/bitstream...
). These marches have been an important channel for disseminating and unifying strategies and frameworks. Yáñez (2021)YÁÑES, Clara Franco. Abortion Rights in Latin America: An Unsettled Battle. GIGA Focus Latin America , Hamburgo, n. 3, p. 1-12, 2021. Available at: https://www.giga-hamburg.de/en/publications/giga-focus/abortion-rights-in-latin-america-an-unsettled-battle. Accessed on: April 18, 2022.
https://www.giga-hamburg.de/en/publicati...
explains that protests have been important occasions for anti-abortion organizations to recruit large groups of young people.
Anti-abortion street mobilizations have been massive and visible outside the institution’s buildings in the last crucial decisions made in the region. During the Argentinian debate about abortion liberalization in Congress, hundreds of pro and anti-abortion activists – identified as “greens” versus “blue” were summoned and remained for days in the congress surroundings to follow the voting ( FELITTI and MORALES, 2020FELITTI, Karina; MORALES, Maria del Rosario Ramirez. Green Handkerchiefs for Legal Abortion: History, Meanings and Circulations in Argentina and Mexico. Encartes , [ s.l. ], v. 3, n. 5, p. 111-145, Mar./Aug. 2020. Available at: https://encartes.mx/en/felitti-ramirez-panuelos-verdes-aborto-argentina-mexico/. Accessed on: April 18, 2022.
https://encartes.mx/en/felitti-ramirez-p...
). The same happened in the recent Colombian trial, when supporters of decriminalizing abortion and their opponents stood outside the courtroom, separated by fences ( TURKEWITZ, 2022TURKEWITZ, Julie. Colombia Decriminalizes Abortion. The New York Times , [ s.l .], February 21, 2022. Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/02/21/world/colombia-court-abortion. Accessed on: April 18, 2022.
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/02/21/...
). During these processes of legal reform, the conservative actors created key alliances with numerous media and professional organizations ( FEUSIER, 2012FEUSIER, Oswaldo. El delito de aborto frente a un derecho penal garantista. 2012. Tesis (Maestría en Derecho Penal) – Universidad Centroamericana José Simeón, El Salvador, 2012. ; PEÑAS DEFAGO, MORÁN FAÚNDES, and VAGGIONE, 2018PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Religious Conservatism on the Global Stage: Threats and Challenges for LGBTI Rights. New York: Global Philanthropy Project, 2018. ).
Large demonstrations also took to the streets in reaction to recent positive developments for SRR activists. In Mexico (2021), after the Supreme Court of Justice of the Nation (SCJN) ruled the criminalization of abortion unconstitutional, and thousands of protesters took to the streets across the country, in a national march “A Favor de la Mujer y de la Vida”, (“To Support Women and Life”) to express opposition ( MENA, GARCÍA, 2021MENA, Carolina Gómez; GARCÍA, Cesar Arellano. “¡Vida sí, aborto, no!”, gritan miles en marcha convocada por clero católico. La Jornada , Ciudad de México, 3 oct. 2021. Available at: https://www.jornada.com.mx/notas/2021/10/03/sociedad/vida-si-aborto-no-gritan-miles-en-marcha-provida-en-cdmx/. Accessed on: April 12, 2022.
https://www.jornada.com.mx/notas/2021/10...
). In Colombia (2022), the “Movilización Nacional por la Vida” (“National Mobilization for Life”) was organized by more than 15 civil society organizations against the recent rule by the Constitutional Court of Colombia that decriminalized abortion up to 24 weeks of gestation ( CIENTOS, 2022CIENTOS de colombianos salieron a marchar en contra del aborto. El Tiempo , [ s.l. ], 27 feb. 2022. Available at: https://www.eltiempo.com/colombia/otras-ciudades/marchas-por-la-vida-y-en-rechazo-al-aborto-en-colombia-654745. Accessed on: April 12, 2022.
https://www.eltiempo.com/colombia/otras-...
).
A systematic data collection and analysis of anti-abortion protest politics in the region is still inexistent. In addition to the visible facet of protest politics, the social texture of anti-abortion activism in Latin America also comprises micro-mobilization strategies silently conducted by civil society organizations, such as bioethics institutes, health providers, and professional organizations that aim to spread conscience objection among health professionals as a form of civil disobedience, to hinder the implementation of reproductive rights. Conscience objection (CO) has been a known and a growing form of denying access to abortion rights in different Latin American countries since the 1990s ( PEÑAS DEFAGO, 2010PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica. Los estudios en bioética y la Iglesia Católica en los casos de Chile y Argentina. In: VAGGIONE, Juan Marco (ed.). El activismo religioso conservador en Latinoamérica . Córdoba: Católicos por el Derecho a Decidir, 2010. p. 47-76. ; IRRÁZABAL, 2011IRRAZÁBAL, Gabriela. La bioética como entrenamiento y facilitadora de la influencia de agentes católicos en el espacio público en Argentina. Revista del Centro de Investigación de la Universidad La Salle , Ciudad de México, v. 9, n. 36, p. 5-23, 2011. and 2016; SIVERINO BAVIO, 2013SIVERINO BAVIO, Paula. Bioética y derechos humanos: La bioética ‘confesional’ como estrategia. In: VAGGIONE, Juan Marco; MUJICA, Jaris. Conservadurismos, religión y política: Perspectivas de investigación en América Latina. Córdoba: Ferreyra/CIECS, 2013. p. 195-236. ). In a 2016 article, Uberoi and Galli (2016)UBEROI, Diya; GALLI, Beatriz. Refusing Reproductive Health Services on Grounds of Conscience in Latin America. SUR 24 , São Paulo, v. 13, n. 24, p. 105-115, 2016. Available at: https://sur.conectas.org/en/refusing-reproductive-health-services-on-grounds-of-conscience-in-latin-america/. Accessed on: April 18, 2022.
https://sur.conectas.org/en/refusing-rep...
warned that the use of CO to deny women their sexual and reproductive health rights was increasing in Latin America, where few countries had regulations on the subject, which meant both an opportunity for abusing the right of conscience and a serious threat to reproductive health services such as emergency contraception and legal abortion.
All in all, acting through mass demonstrations or silent grassroots strategies to understand the conservative shift in Latin America is crucial in order to consider the capacity of anti-abortion movements to agglomerate, channel, and magnify their agendas at national, regional, and international levels, articulating different repertoires of social mobilization, including religious, institutional and civil society spaces ( MORGAN, 2021bMORGAN, Lynn. Global Anti-Abortion Coalition Targets the Organization of American States. NACLA , [ s.l. ], 4 jun. 2021b. Available at: https://nacla.org/news/2021/06/04/global-anti-abortion-coalition-targets-organization-american-states. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://nacla.org/news/2021/06/04/global...
). Within this diverse repertoire, litigation gained prominence; we dedicate the next section to exploring experiences of anti-abortion legal mobilization in the region.
4. THE ANTI-ABORTION TURN TO LAW
There has been a historical presence of Catholic actors among jurists in Latin America, allowing Catholic values to permeate the countries’ legal systems in several ways ( ALMEIDA, 2017ALMEIDA, Ronaldo de. A onda quebrada: evangélicos e conservadorismo. Cadernos Pagu , [ s. l. ], n. 50, 2017, Dossiê Conservadorismo, Direitos, Moralidades e Violência. Available at: https://www.scielo.br/j/cpa/a/Cr9ShrVJbCWsDHMrxTDm3wb/abstract/?lang=pt. Accessed on: April 13, 2022.
https://www.scielo.br/j/cpa/a/Cr9ShrVJbC...
). However, strategic and systematic use of litigation by the anti-abortion field is emerging in the region. The increased use of legal mobilization and legal advocacy as key tools for anti-abortion movement is a trend identified by different studies ( PEÑAS DEFAGO and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2014PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Conservative Litigation against Sexual and Reproductive Health Policies in Argentina. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 82-90, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44805-5. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44...
; RUIBAL, 2014RUIBAL, Alba M. Movement and Counter-Movement: A History of Abortion Law Reform and the Backlash in Colombia 2006-2014. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 42-51, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44803-1. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44...
; PEÑAS DEFAGO, 2019; MACHADO and BRACARENSE, 2016MACHADO, Marta Rodriguez de Assis; BRACARENSE, Ana Carolina. O caso do feto anencefálico: Direitos sexuais e reprodutivos, confronto e negociação argumentativa no Supremo Tribunal Federal. Revista Direito e Práxis , Rio de Janeiro, v. 15, n. 7, p. 677-714, 2016. ; BERGALLO, JARAMILLO SIERRA, and VAGGIONE, 2018BERGALLO, Paola; SIERRA, Isabel Cristina Jaramillo; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco (eds.). El aborto en América Latina: estrategias jurídicas para luchar por su legalización y enfrentar las resistencias conservadoras. Buenos Aires: Siglo XXI Editores, 2018. 464 p. ; VIEIRA and EFREM FILHO, 2020VIEIRA, Adriana Dias; EFREM FILHO, Roberto O rei está nu: Gênero e sexualidade nas práticas e decisões no STF. Revista Direito e Práxis , Rio de Janeiro, v. 11, n. 2, p. 1084-1136, abr./jun. 2020. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1590/2179-8966/2020/50699. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1590/2179-8966/2020/5...
).
The wave of re-democratization and the promulgation of new constitutions in Latin America promoted new impetus for legal mobilization in the region. Strong charters of rights, public prosecutors, class, constitutional actions, and empowered Supreme or Constitutional Courts made litigation an important tool for progressive social movements in the first decades since the transition era ( BRINKS and FORTBATH, 2014BRINKS, Daniel M.; FORBATH, William. The role of Courts and Constitutions in the New Politics of Welfare in Latin America. In: PEERENBOOM, Randall; GINSBURG, Tom (eds.). Law and Development of Middle-Income Countries: Avoiding the Middle-Income Trap. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014. p. 221-245. ). Over the past decade the use of legal mobilization to resolve issues related to sexuality and reproduction has escalated ( COOK, ERDMAN, and DICKENS, 2016COOK, Rebecca; ERDMAN, Joanna; DICKENS, Bernard (eds.). El aborto en el derecho transnational: Casos y controvérsias: Introducción. México: CIDE/FCE, 2016. ; LEMAITRE, 2014LEMAITRE, Julieta Ripoll. Catholic Constitucionalism on Sex, Women, and the Beginning of Life. In: COOK, Rebecca J.; ERDMAN, Joanna N.; DICKENS, Bernard M. Abortion Law in Transnational Perspective: Cases and Controversies. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014. p. 239-257. ). And, in many cases, the Judiciary has been used as a means to revert or block sexual and reproductive-related advancements in other arenas ( PEÑAS DEFAGO and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2014PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Conservative Litigation against Sexual and Reproductive Health Policies in Argentina. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 82-90, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44805-5. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44...
; MONTE and VAGGIONE, 2019MONTE, María Eugenia; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Cortes irrumpidas: la judicialización conservadora del aborto en Argentina. Revista Rupturas , [ s.l. ], v. 9, n. 1, p. 104-122, 2019. ). The intensification of anti-abortion litigation and the use of the language of rights – particularly human rights – is an important phenomenon to be observed in the field. It also has its roots in the aftermath of the UN Conferences.
After the victories of reproductive rights in the Conferences, one of the central themes that started being discussed and prioritized in public policies in different Latin American countries was the access to the morning-after pill ( PEÑAS DEFAGO and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2014PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Conservative Litigation against Sexual and Reproductive Health Policies in Argentina. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 82-90, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44805-5. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44...
). In response, starting in 1998, several conservative sectors set a mobilization in different countries (e.g., Argentina, Chile, Colombia, and Ecuador) to prohibit access to these pharmaceuticals ( DIDES CASTILLO, 2006DIDES CASTILLO, Claudia. Voces en emergencia: el discurso conservador y la píldora del día después. Santiago: FLACSO, 2006. 187 p. ; FLORES, 2008FLORES, Rocio Villanueva. Protección constitucional de los derechos sexuales y reproductivos . San José: Instituto Interamericano de Derechos Humanos Protección constitucional de los derechos sexuales y reproductivos, 2008. 126 p. ; PEÑAS DEFAGO, 2010PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica. Los estudios en bioética y la Iglesia Católica en los casos de Chile y Argentina. In: VAGGIONE, Juan Marco (ed.). El activismo religioso conservador en Latinoamérica . Córdoba: Católicos por el Derecho a Decidir, 2010. p. 47-76. ). From this point forward, litigation became one of the key strategies of self-proclaimed pro-life groups in their battle against the morning-after pill ( DIDES CASTILLO, 2006DIDES CASTILLO, Claudia. Voces en emergencia: el discurso conservador y la píldora del día después. Santiago: FLACSO, 2006. 187 p. ; BERGALLO, 2010BERGALLO, Paola. El debate jurídico en torno a la anticoncepción de emergencia: Una mirada comparada. In: ARILHA, Margareth; LAPA, Thaís Souza; PISANESCH, Tatiane Creen (eds.). Contracepção de emergência no Brasil e América Latina: dinâmicas políticas e direitos sexuais e reprodutivos. São Paulo: Comissão de Cidadania e Reprodução. 2010. p. 9-62. ). The background of these demands was always the same: the approval of the morning-after pill implied, in an underhanded way, the enabling of abortion.
While expanding their strategy, anti-abortion actors started to use the courts to challenge any attempt to legalize abortion on demand and any effort to make legal abortion services accessible and safe for women ( MADRAZO LAJOUS and VELA BARBA, 2013MADRAZO LAJOUS, Alejandro; VELA BARBA, Estefanía. Conservando esencias: El uso conservador del lenguaje de los derechos fundamentales (dos estudios de caso). In: VAGGIONE, Juan Marco; MUJICA, Jaris. Conservadurismos, religión y política: perspectivas de investigación en América Latina. Córdoba: Ferreyra/CIECS, 2013. ; PEÑAS DEFAGO and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2014PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Conservative Litigation against Sexual and Reproductive Health Policies in Argentina. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 82-90, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44805-5. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44...
; RUIBAL, 2014RUIBAL, Alba M. Movement and Counter-Movement: A History of Abortion Law Reform and the Backlash in Colombia 2006-2014. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 42-51, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44803-1. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44...
). In Brazil, a constitutional challenge arrived at the Federal Supreme Court to contest the constitutionality of the Biosafety Law approved in 2005, to regulate embryo research, claiming, among other points, a violation of the right to life ( BRAZILIAN SUPREME COURT, 2008BRAZILIAN SUPREME COURT. Direct Action of Unconstitutionality 3510 (ADI 3510) . 2008. Available at: https://redir.stf.jus.br/paginadorpub/paginador.jsp?docTP=AC&docID=611723. Accessed on: October 20, 2022.
https://redir.stf.jus.br/paginadorpub/pa...
). In 2007, Mexico City decriminalized the first-trimester abortion within city limits. Conservative civil organizations asked the Supreme Court to overturn the law ( MÉXICO, 2007MÉXICO. Distrito Federal. Decreto por el que se Reforma el Código Penal para el Distrito Federal y se Adiciona la Ley de Salud para el Distrito Federal . Distrito Federal: Gaceta Oficial del Distrito Federal, p. 2-3, 26 abr. 2007. ). When ruling the case, the Supreme Court held six public hearings in which anti-abortion actors actively participated ( ANSOLABEHERE, 2009ANSOLABEHERE, Karina. Oportunidades y decisiones: La judicialización del aborto en perspectiva comparada. SELA Paper , [ s. l. ], n. 77, 2009. Available at: https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/yls_sela/77/. Accessed on: April 13, 2022.
https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/yls_...
). In 2012, Argentina’s Supreme Court ruled that abortion is legal in case of rape ( ARGENTINA, 2012ARGENTINA. Corte Suprema de Justicia. Sentença F., A. L. s/ medida autosatisfactiva de 13 de marzo de 2012 . ). In its ruling, the court determined that access to abortion does not need to be contingent on any legal, administrative, or police procedure. In this scenario, litigation was once again a key strategy of anti-abortion actors, this time on the lower level: by using provincial courts, anti-abortion actors attempted to locally resist what had been established by the Supreme Court ( MONTE, VAGGIONE, 2019MONTE, María Eugenia; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Cortes irrumpidas: la judicialización conservadora del aborto en Argentina. Revista Rupturas , [ s.l. ], v. 9, n. 1, p. 104-122, 2019. ). The total abortion ban in Chile was only overthrown after the 2017 legal reform that created three instances for legal abortion, a group of legislators filed a constitutional writ before the Constitutional Court right after the law’s approval, claiming the recognition of institutional conscientious objection. As we mentioned before, such a position – eventually ratified by the Court – was defended by the Catholic Church during the legislative debate, aiming to exclude the enforceability of the law ( MAIRA, CASAS, and VIVALDI, 2019MAIRA, Gloria; CASAS, Lidia; VIVALDI, Lieta. Abortion in Chile: The Long Road to Legalization and its Slow Implementation. Health and Human Rights , [ s.l .], v. 21, n. 2, p. 121-131, 2019. ). Finally, in 2021, after the law enabling abortion up to 14 weeks was voted in Argentina ( ARGENTINA, 2021ARGENTINA. Ley 27610: Acceso a la Interrupcion Voluntaria del Embarazo. Buenos Aires: Congresso de la Nación Argentina, 15 janeiro 2021. Available at: https://www.argentina.gob.ar/normativa/nacional/ley-27610-346231. Accessed on: April 12, 2022.
https://www.argentina.gob.ar/normativa/n...
), litigation against it multiplied in the country. As of the date of this article, there have been more than 37 lawsuits filed against the law ( AMNISTÍA INTERNACIONAL, 2021AMNISTÍA INTERNACIONAL. Ley 27.610 de Interrupción Voluntaria del Embarazo: Análisis a un año de su vigencia: El litigio como herramienta para defender y fortalecer su implementación. Buenos Aires: Amnistía Internacional, 2021. Available at: https://amnistia.org.ar/wp-content/uploads/delightful-downloads/2021/12/Informe-Litigio.pdf. Accessed on: April 18, 2022.
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).
Abortion regulations in Latin America have proven to be an ebullient field, with regulations highly disputed in all arenas and subjected to constant transformations. The recent intervention of courts in the issue provoked important shifts in the balance of political opportunities. The constitutionalization of abortion is defined as the adjudication of abortion rights by Constitutional or Supreme Courts ( SIEGEL, 2012SIEGEL, Reva B. The Constitutionalization of Abortion. In: ROSENFELD; Michel; SAJÓ, András (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Constitutional Law . Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012. p. 1057-1079. ). If the decision of 1973 has once unveiled this process, it was possible to evidence a new wave of constitutional abortion cases worldwide, and Latin America seems fully inserted in such wave. The cases have been taken to courts by both pro and anti-abortion movements, and increased use of litigation by anti-abortion actors is new in many countries. Anti-abortion actors are not only proposing constitutional cases, but have been actively presenting amici curiae , speaking at public hearings, and formulating legal arguments to block advances via Courts ( ANSOLABEHERE, 2009ANSOLABEHERE, Karina. Oportunidades y decisiones: La judicialización del aborto en perspectiva comparada. SELA Paper , [ s. l. ], n. 77, 2009. Available at: https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/yls_sela/77/. Accessed on: April 13, 2022.
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; RUIBAL, 2014RUIBAL, Alba M. Movement and Counter-Movement: A History of Abortion Law Reform and the Backlash in Colombia 2006-2014. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 42-51, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44803-1. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44...
; GIANELLA-MALCA, 2018GIANELLA-MALCA, Camila. Movimiento transnacional contra el derecho al aborto en América Latina. In: BERGALLO, Paola; SIERRA, Isabel Cristina Jaramillo; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco (eds.). El aborto en América Latina: estrategias jurídicas para luchar por su legalización y enfrentar las resistencias conservadoras. Buenos Aires: Siglo XXI Editores, 2018, p. 351-378. ). They have been strongly mobilized to participate in public hearings and advocacy in all important abortion constitutional cases in the region, as in recent Mexican ( MENA and GARCÍA, 2021MENA, Carolina Gómez; GARCÍA, Cesar Arellano. “¡Vida sí, aborto, no!”, gritan miles en marcha convocada por clero católico. La Jornada , Ciudad de México, 3 oct. 2021. Available at: https://www.jornada.com.mx/notas/2021/10/03/sociedad/vida-si-aborto-no-gritan-miles-en-marcha-provida-en-cdmx/. Accessed on: April 12, 2022.
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) and the Colombian Constitutional Court decisions.
The arena unveiled by the judiciary has become an important locus of visibility used by pro and anti-abortion social movements to make their positions resonate in the public debate. In this way, the court can function as a stage – staging area, in Kirchheimer’s expression (1961) – for the confrontation between different positions. It is an opportunity to win supporters, increase adherence to the cause, insert new elements into the political game, or pressure other arenas. We have had Court cases staging abortion disputes in the region since the end of the 1990s, with a visible intensification in the last decade, moved by the increase of litigation by anti-abortion forces. There are progressively new actors attending such events to publicly oppose sexual and reproductive rights. The use of Courts to disseminate anti-abortion legal arguments is essential not only because of the direct legal effects that litigation can have on sexual and reproductive rights but also because of its impact on those providing health or public services, who play an essential role in the implementation of such rights. In countries where issues such as abortion and adolescent sexuality still present a dense moral significance, conservative litigation might create a perception of legal uncertainty and open space for practices that reinforce traditional moral notions, thereby deepening the symbolic effects of litigation ( PEÑAS DEFAGO and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2014PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. Conservative Litigation against Sexual and Reproductive Health Policies in Argentina. Reproductive Health Matters , [ s.l. ], v. 22, n. 44, p. 82-90, 2014. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0968-8080(14)44805-5. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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; BENNETT, 2017BENNETT, Daniel. Defending Faith: The Politics of the Christian Conservative Legal Movement. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2017. 224 p. ; ARILHA and CITELI, 2010ARILHA, Margareth; CITELI, Maria Teresa. Intervenções restritivas ao acesso da Contracepção de Emergência no Brasil (1999-2009): um mapa geopolítico das barreiras aos direitos reprodutivos no país. In: ARILHA, Margareth; LAPA, Thaís Souza; PISANESCH, Tatiane Creen (eds.). Contracepção de emergência no Brasil e América Latina: dinâmicas políticas e direitos sexuais e reprodutivos. São Paulo: Comissão de Cidadania e Reprodução, 2010. p. 135-162. ). One diffuse effect of litigation and the use of rights to justify anti-abortion practices is to breed conscientious objectors.
4.1. DISPUTING HUMAN RIGHTS
The technocratization of the anti-abortion discourse, mainly the use of legal language, has been pointed out as a resource of the anti-abortion movement to overcome the limits of religious power in some political spaces ( MORGAN, 2014MORGAN, Lynn. Claiming Rosa Parks: Conservative Catholic Bids for “rights” in Contemporary Latin America. Culture, Health & Sexuality , v. 16, n. 10, p. 1245-1259, 2014. ; GIANELLA-MALCA, 2018GIANELLA-MALCA, Camila. Movimiento transnacional contra el derecho al aborto en América Latina. In: BERGALLO, Paola; SIERRA, Isabel Cristina Jaramillo; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco (eds.). El aborto en América Latina: estrategias jurídicas para luchar por su legalización y enfrentar las resistencias conservadoras. Buenos Aires: Siglo XXI Editores, 2018, p. 351-378. ). Especially in secular arenas, like the judiciary, it is necessary to behave not as religious actors, but as technical experts. Thus, it is not a coincidence that secular discourses have increased simultaneously with the emergence of scientific and legal organizations in the anti-abortion field, such as bioethics institutes, think tanks, research institutes, associations of jurists, etc. Those actors tend to mobilize legal and scientific frameworks, by replacing (sometimes supplementing) religious ones, while still keeping particular moral undertones, interpretations linked to natural law, and absolute understanding of the right to life ( VAGGIONE, 2005VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Reactive Politicization and Religious Dissidence: The Political Mutations of the Religious. Social Theory and Practice , [ s.l. ], v. 31, n. 2, p. 165-188, Apr. 2005. Available at: https://doi.org/10.5840/soctheorpract200531210. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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; PEÑAS DEFAGO, 2010PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica. Los estudios en bioética y la Iglesia Católica en los casos de Chile y Argentina. In: VAGGIONE, Juan Marco (ed.). El activismo religioso conservador en Latinoamérica . Córdoba: Católicos por el Derecho a Decidir, 2010. p. 47-76. ; MORGAN, 2014MORGAN, Lynn. Claiming Rosa Parks: Conservative Catholic Bids for “rights” in Contemporary Latin America. Culture, Health & Sexuality , v. 16, n. 10, p. 1245-1259, 2014. ; MACHADO, in pressMACHADO, Marta Rodriguez de Assis. The Appropriation of Human Rights by Reactionary Religious and Political Forces: New Global Trends. International Journal of Constitutional Law , in press. ).
Since the 1990s, the prioritization of the sexual agenda imposed by the Vatican, under the leadership of Pope John Paul II, has reinforced a discourse based on the “protection of life” from the moment of conception ( VATICANO, 1995VATICANO. Evangelium Vitae: Sobre o valor e a inviolabilidade da vida. 1995. Available at: http://www.vatican.va/content/john-paul-ii/pt/encyclicals/documents/hf_jp-ii_enc_25031995_evangelium-vitae.html. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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). This line of speech has provided the main tone for the actions aimed at influencing debates on sexuality, in which “life” is upheld as a key notion for conservative Catholic organizations in their resistance to policies advocating for greater sexual plurality and autonomy ( ALDANA, 2008ALDANA, Myriam. Vozes católicas no Congresso Nacional: aborto, defesa da vida. Revista Estudos Feministas , Florianópolis, v. 16, n. 2, p. 639-646, 2008. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1590/S0104-026X2008000200018. Accessed on: June 23, 2021.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0104-026X200800...
; VAGGIONE, 2012VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. La “cultura de la vida”: Desplazamientos estratégicos del activismo Católico conservador frente a los derechos sexuales y reproductivos. Religião e Sociedade , Rio de Janeiro, v. 32, n. 2, p. 57-80, 2012. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-85872012000200004. Accessed on: April 14 abr. 2022.
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, PEÑAS DEFAGO and MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2013PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. ¿Defensores de la vida? ¿De cuál “vida”? Un análisis genealógico de la noción de “vida” sostenida por la jerarquía católica contra el aborto. Sexualidad, Salud y Sociedad , Rio de Janeiro, p. 10-36, Dec. 2013. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1590/S1984-64872013000300002. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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). Since then, the mobilization of the right to life by anti-abortion activists presented an ambiguous relationship with secularization, often mixing legal sources and religious documents, for example, the Evangelium Vitae , the gospel of life ( BRAZIL, 2008aBRAZIL. Câmara dos Deputados. Projeto de Lei n. 2.747/2008, de 11 de fevereiro de 2008 . Brasilia, 2008a. and 2008bBRAZIL. Câmara dos Deputados. Projeto de Lei n. 3.748/2008, de 16 de julho de 2008 . Brasilia, 2008b. ).
Progressively, religious frameworks and references to religious sources tended to decline in some arenas. The defense of the right to life started to be associated more frequently with notions of human rights, or fundamental rights, than with religious arguments ( MORGAN, 2014MORGAN, Lynn. Claiming Rosa Parks: Conservative Catholic Bids for “rights” in Contemporary Latin America. Culture, Health & Sexuality , v. 16, n. 10, p. 1245-1259, 2014. ). Lemaitre (2014)LEMAITRE, Julieta Ripoll. Catholic Constitucionalism on Sex, Women, and the Beginning of Life. In: COOK, Rebecca J.; ERDMAN, Joanna N.; DICKENS, Bernard M. Abortion Law in Transnational Perspective: Cases and Controversies. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014. p. 239-257. calls it “the shift to reason,” a strategic process ( VAGGIONE, 2005VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Reactive Politicization and Religious Dissidence: The Political Mutations of the Religious. Social Theory and Practice , [ s.l. ], v. 31, n. 2, p. 165-188, Apr. 2005. Available at: https://doi.org/10.5840/soctheorpract200531210. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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) linked to the structural transformation of the anti-abortion field. The participation of lawyers, doctors, scientists, and policymakers impacts the discursive sphere. These actors tend to build their arguments – and legitimate them – using technical arguments rather than religious faith logic, even if moral dogmas still exist and permeate their mindset.
Recent systematic analysis of the evolution of conservative arguments against abortion in Colombia in institutional arenas and the media made by Contreras and Escalante (2018)CONTRERAS, María Isabel Niño; ESCALANTE, Juan Carlos Rincón. Radiografía de los argumentos conservadores contra el aborto en Colombia. Sugerencias para un movimiento pro liberalización. In: BERGALLO, Paola; SIERRA, Isabel Cristina Jaramillo; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco (eds.). El aborto en América Latina: Estrategias jurídicas para luchar por su legalización y enfrentar las resistencias conservadoras. Buenos Aires: Siglo XXI Editores, 2018. p. 379-406. demonstrate that the conservative opposition to abortion strategically adopts secular ideas. However, they are still rooted in moral views and traditional values that surface when they compare abortion to murder or make references to the woman and the fetus as “mother,” “baby” or “innocent creature”. In the Artavia Murillo case ruled by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in 2012, Julieta Lemaitre Ripoll and Rachel Sieder (2017, p. 4) show “how neoconservative actors use in their arguments a wielded conservative Catholic argument aligned with the Evangelium Vitae , but precluding religious references”. In Brazil, during the public hearing of ADPF 442 (a proposal to decriminalize voluntary abortion), anti-abortion actors used a greater variety of legal arguments. Although the core of the argument was still the right to life from conception and human dignity, a considerable part of the manifestations of confessional or religious organizations adopted the legal debate: they did not base their arguments on moral-religious reasons or religious documents and were eager to support their arguments with legal sources – for example, the Inter-American Convention on Human Rights, the right to life, dignity, and fundamental guarantees according to the Brazilian Federal Constitution, and the Civil Code as a ground to the recognition of legal personhood to the fetus ( CADHU, s.d.CADHU – Coletivo de Advocacia em Direitos Humanos. ADPF 442: Relatório de Argumentos Amici Curiae. [ s.l. ], [ s.d. ]. ).
While the “fundamental right to life” has been articulated by pro-life groups for quite a while, the use of human rights frameworks has been accentuated and expanded in recent years. Anti-abortion mobilization started to incorporate and reinterpret more aggressively several categories of the human rights grammar (one milestone, for example, is the dignity principle), and even started to dispute those that have been used predominantly by progressive groups, such as equality, anti-discrimination, religious freedom and conscience ( MORGAN, 2014MORGAN, Lynn. Claiming Rosa Parks: Conservative Catholic Bids for “rights” in Contemporary Latin America. Culture, Health & Sexuality , v. 16, n. 10, p. 1245-1259, 2014. ). In many cases, such as Argentina, Brazil, Chile, El Salvador, and Nicaragua, the discourses of some pro-life NGOs and religious leaders have strategically adapted themselves to associate abortion with crimes against humanity, drawing on the rhetoric of human rights policies of the 21st century in post-conflict contexts ( MORGAN, 2014MORGAN, Lynn. Claiming Rosa Parks: Conservative Catholic Bids for “rights” in Contemporary Latin America. Culture, Health & Sexuality , v. 16, n. 10, p. 1245-1259, 2014. ; CARBONELLI, MOSQUEIRA, and FELITTI, 2011CARBONELLI, Marcos; MOSQUEIRA, Mariela; FELITTI, Karina. Religión, sexualidad y política en la Argentina: Intervenciones católicas y evangélicas entorno al aborto y el matrimonio igualitario. Revista del Centro de Investigación , Cidade do México, v. 9, n. 36, p. 25-43, 2011. ; GUDIÑO-BESSONE, 2017GUDIÑO-BESSONE, Pablo. Iglesia Católica y redes transnacionales de activismo antiabortista: bioética y usos políticos de la memoria del Holocausto. Religación , Quito, v. 2, n. 8, p. 126-142, 2017. ; MACHADO and BRACARENSE, 2018MACHADO, Marta Rodriguez de Assis; BRACARENSE, Ana Carolina. 2018. El movimiento pro y antiaborto en el Supremo Tribunal brasileño: Marcos y estrategias argumentativas utilizados en la audiencia pública referente al feto anencefálico. In: BERGALLO, Paola; SIERRA, Isabel Cristina Jaramillo; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco (eds.). El aborto en América Latina: estrategias jurídicas para luchar por su legalización y enfrentar las resistencias conservadoras. Buenos Aires: Siglo XXI Editores, 2018. ). According to this line of thinking, abortion is framed as genocide, a crime against humanity, and a discriminatory practice against people with disabilities. The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child are often cited in those discourses ( MACHADO and COOK, 2018MACHADO, Marta Rodriguez de Assis; COOK, Rebecca J. Constitucionalização do aborto no Brasil: uma análise a partir do caso da gravidez anencefálica. Direito e Práxis , Rio de Janeiro, v. 10, n. 3, p. 2239-2296, 2018. Available at: https://www.e-publicacoes.uerj.br/index.php/revistaceaju/article/view/43406/29875. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
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; BIROLI and CAMINOTTI, 2020BIROLI, Flávia; CAMINOTTI, Mariana. The Conservative Backlash against Gender in Latin America. Politics & Gender , [ s.l. ], v. 16, n. 1, 2020. ).7
7
In the US, disability rights advocates have a history of disagreement on the issue of abortion rights. Although they may be pro-choice or pro-life, many disability rights advocates agree that abortions should not be used to discriminate against children who may be born with disabilities and have concerns about abortion resulting in discrimination against persons with disabilities ( SHAFFER, 2009 , p. 271).
Lynn Morgan (2014)MORGAN, Lynn. Claiming Rosa Parks: Conservative Catholic Bids for “rights” in Contemporary Latin America. Culture, Health & Sexuality , v. 16, n. 10, p. 1245-1259, 2014. shows how Latin America’s religious conservatives developed an alternative narrative of human rights to contest abortion rights, drawing on the US civil rights framework. The region’s human rights tradition is rooted in a sort of social Catholicism, praising a social justice project that has the traditional family at its core, and that includes family, natural and fetal rights. Social Catholicism has more elective affinities with social justice claims than with individual rights, such as choice, privacy, or autonomy of the body. This legal-cultural context buttresses new anti-abortion strategies that start to emphasize the protection of women among their aims. Such pro-life strategies have de-emphasized the criminalization of women in their discourses (although never taking it back) to adopt a discourse of “protection”: they talk about protecting “children’s rights” and protecting women from the suffering and the trauma of abortion. In Argentina, during the debate on the legalization of abortion in 2018, the campaign “salvemos las dos vidas” (“Let’s save both lives”) emerged ( LÓPEZ and LOZA, 2021LÓPEZ, Magdalena; LOZA, Jorgelina. Articulaciones, representaciones y estrategias de la movilización contra la interrupción voluntaria del embarazo en Argentina (2018-2020). Población & Sociedad , [ s.l. ], v. 28, n. 1, p. 131-161, 2021. ). Since then this campaign has been replicated throughout the region.
More recently, other liberal human rights values started being used against sexual and reproductive rights. Freedom of expression, conscience, and religion, allied to the protection of the family and the right to raise children according to one’s conscience and faith, have been often articulated in the anti-abortion, anti-sexual and reproductive rights field more broadly.8
8
See, for example, the new pro-life doctrine published in Brazil by jurist Ives Gandra Martins et al. (2020) .
While conscience claims have traditionally been used to promote pluralism and accommodate religious individual faith in general secular regulations or public policies, its new usage by neoconservatives, on the contrary, aims to block recently conquered minority rights, impose harm to third parties and undermine pluralism ( NEJAIME and SIEGEL, 2020NEJAIME, Douglas; SIEGEL, Reva B. Conscience Wars in the Americas. Latin American Law Review , [ s.l. ], n. 5, p. 1-26, Aug. 2020. Available at: https://doi.org/10.29263/lar05.2020.01. Accessed on: April 18, 2022.
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). For example, in Brazil, 2018, a lawsuit was filed by a catholic organization requesting the Brazilian chapter of the Catholics for the Right to Decide (CDD) to be legally compelled to suppress the word “Catholics” from its nomenclature, alleging violation of religious freedom. This request was granted by the Court of Justice of São Paulo, which imposed the removal of the term from the name of one of the most traditional pro-reproductive rights organizations ( SÃO PAULO, 2020SÃO PAULO. Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo (2a Câmara de Direito Privado). Apelação Cível n. 1071628-96.2018.8.26.0100 . Des. Relator José Carlos Ferreira Alves. São Paulo, 20 out. 2020. ).
The intense use of legal tools and the reinterpretation of the human rights discourse show that anti-abortion actors are creatively adapting law and the rights discourse to their interests and disputing their meanings.9 9 Lynn Morgan (2021b) lists the constitutional amendment approved in 2021 in Honduras as part of a coordinated effort to fortify national constitutions and insulate them from international human rights law. Anti-abortion usage of human rights calls attention to the fact that human rights have an ambivalent and disputable nature ( SIEGEL, 2012SIEGEL, Reva B. The Constitutionalization of Abortion. In: ROSENFELD; Michel; SAJÓ, András (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Constitutional Law . Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012. p. 1057-1079. ) in addition to being a disputable terrain today. The recent legal mobilization battles in the region show that anti-abortion forces are actively disputing the interpretation of the human rights paradigm aiming to drastically reshape the prevailing understandings and use of such language.
5. RE-DEFINING THE BORDERS OF THE FIELD: THE ANTI-GENDER MASTER FRAME
As shown in this article, abortion battles have been populistically captured in electoral politics and connected with the increased presence of Evangelical Churches in several countries across Latin America. The local political processes have been connected with transnational activism, with activists of both sides linking the national and international arenas. Each country’s political process mutually affects others in the region – and abortion legislation has been in constant reform across different countries. The recent decisions in Argentina, Mexico, and Colombia are said to be inaugurating a pro-sexual and reproductive rights wave in the region, while Bolsonaro, in Brazil, reacted aggressively on Twitter against the legalization of abortion in Argentina ( BOLSONARO, 2020BOLSONARO critica decisão na Argentina e diz que aborto jamais será aprovado no Brasil. Folha de S.Paulo , São Paulo, 30 dez. 2020. Available at: https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/mundo/2020/12/ernesto-condena-legalizacao-do-aborto-na-argentina-e-chama-decisao-de-barbarie.shtml. Accessed on: April 13, 2022.
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). Such active mobilization, political visibility, and deep shifts happening in the field naturally impact the production of meaning and the framing processes.
Social movement actors are always engaged in the production of meaning. Activists and social movement organizations are always framing, amplifying, extending, and transforming their meanings ( SNOW et al. , 1986SNOW, David et al. Frame Alignment Processes, Micromobilization, and Movement Participation. American Sociological Review , [ s.l. ], v. 51, n. 4, p. 464-481, 1986. ). Under this perspective, observing the field of dispute around abortion also means observing the variation of frameworks over time, due to the type of organizations in operation, the interlocutors involved, the social and institutional norms governing the arena, and the characteristics of the observed event.
In the recent Latin American field, we observe more localized processes of creation of new anti-abortion frameworks or shifts in their interpretations (for example, the more intense use of scientific and legal frames); but there is an overarching process happening through the creation of a master frame.
Master frames have the same function as specific frames in a discursive organization and symbolic dimension but on a larger scale. They are more generic and tend to work more as an interpretative paradigm of various issues. They articulate many different movements as they offer a common ground to all of them ( SNOW and BENFORD, 1992SNOW, David; BENFORD, Robert D. Master Frames and Cycles of protest. In: MORRIS, Aldon; MUELLER, Carol McClurg (eds.). Frontiers in Social Movement Theory . New Haven: Yale University Press, 1992. p. 133-155. ). The anti-gender ideology as a construct that threatens the traditional families is the master frame that seals the alliances between movements not only against abortion policies but also against same-sex marriage, sex education in schools, gender approach in public policies, as well as the entire LGBTQ+ agenda. However, the gender ideology discourse is also used as a master frame to label the demands of the feminist and LGBTIQ+ movements as “cultural Marxism”, which is a new Marxism aimed no longer at transforming economic structures but culture, including the family structure, gender identities and sexuality ( MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2019MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. The Geopolitics of Moral Panic: The Influence of Argentinian Neo-Conservatism in the Genesis of the Discourse of “Gender Ideology”. International Sociology , v. 34, n. 4, p. 1-16, 2019. ). Based on this idea, the discourse of “gender ideology” arises a series of moral panics associated with sexuality and gender, and even the specter of communism, in rhetoric that recalls the logic of the Cold War ( MORÁN FAÚNDES and PEÑAS DEFAGO, 2020MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel; PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica. Una mirada regional de las articulaciones neoconservadoras. Rupturas y continuidades transnacionales. In: SANTANA, Ailynn Torres (ed.). Derechos en Riesgo en América Latina: 11 estudios sobre grupos neoconservadores. Bogotá: Ediciones desde Abajo/Fundación Rosa Luxemburgo, 2020. p. 241-270. ).
The means for this expansion had already been boosted in the 1990s by the Catholic Church. In the Cairo Conference (1994) and the Conference on Women in Beijing (1995), the Holy See and its allies strategically opposed the inclusion of the term “gender” in the final documents because they argued that the “gender” perspective portrayed a model imposed by liberals against the traditional family ( FRANCO, 1998FRANCO, Jean. The Long March of Feminism. NACLA Report on the Americas , [ s.l. ], v. 31, n. 4, p. 10-15, 1998. ). Under this view, “gender” was an artificial definition used as part of savage capitalism. Thus, through the frame of “gender ideology,” the Catholic hierarchy and its allies sought to denounce movements, such as the feminist and LGBTIQ+, that purportedly undermined the traditional family and thus weakened the moral foundations of nations. Coined by Catholic public intellectuals and popularized by Pope Benedict XVI, the “gender ideology” frame has been diffused and appropriated by the whole range of old and new actors in the movement ( LEMAITRE, 2014LEMAITRE, Julieta Ripoll. Catholic Constitucionalism on Sex, Women, and the Beginning of Life. In: COOK, Rebecca J.; ERDMAN, Joanna N.; DICKENS, Bernard M. Abortion Law in Transnational Perspective: Cases and Controversies. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014. p. 239-257. ; PATERNOTTE, 2015PATERNOTTE, David. Blessing the Crowds: Catholic Mobilisations against Gender in Europe. In: HARK, Sabine; VILLA, Paula Irene (eds.). (Anti-)Genderismus: Sexualität und Geschlecht als Schauplätze aktueller politischer Auseinandersetzungen. Bielefeld: Transcript, 2015. ; MORÁN FAÚNDES, 2019MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel. The Geopolitics of Moral Panic: The Influence of Argentinian Neo-Conservatism in the Genesis of the Discourse of “Gender Ideology”. International Sociology , v. 34, n. 4, p. 1-16, 2019. ).
The master frame allowed the anti-abortion movement to both broaden its battlefield and acquire new allies. It has become a central component among Catholic, Evangelical, and civil society actors alike in their mobilizations against sex education ( GIANELLA-MALCA, MACHADO, and PEÑAS DEFAGO, 2017GIANELLA-MALCA, Camila; MACHADO, Marta Rodriguez de Assis; PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica. What Causes Latin America’s High Incidence of Adolescent Pregnancy? CMI Brief , [ s.l. ], v. 16, n. 9, p. 1-4, 2017. ; CORRÊA, 2018CORRÊA, Sônia. A “política do gênero”: um comentário genealógico. Cadernos Pagu , [ s.l. ], n. 53, 2018. ). By denouncing “gender ideology,” these actors oppose feminist and LGBTQ+ demands due to their anti-family agenda, anti-nature standpoint, and colonizing/imperialist tendencies ( CAREAGA-PÉREZ, 2016CAREAGA-PÉREZ, Gloria. Moral Panic and Gender Ideology in Latin America. Religion and Gender , [ s.l. ], v. 6, n. 2, p. 251–55, 2016. ). In addition, the use and impact of the “gender ideology” frame in the last electoral campaign in Brazil by Jair Bolsonaro ( STEFANONI, 2018STEFANONI, Pablo. Biblia, buey y bala... recargados: Jair Bolsonaro, la ola conservadora en Brasil y América Latina. Nueva Sociedad , n. 278, nov./dic. 2018. Available at: https://nuso.org/articulo/biblia-buey-y-bala-ola-conservadora-brasil-bolsonaro-stefanoni/. Accessed on: April 18, 2022.
https://nuso.org/articulo/biblia-buey-y-...
), and in Costa Rica by Fabricio Alvarado, evidences how this framework is increasingly being used as a key signifier in the emergence of the neoconservative political agenda ( PEÑAS DEFAGO et al. , 2018PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Religious Conservatism on the Global Stage: Threats and Challenges for LGBTI Rights. New York: Global Philanthropy Project, 2018. ).
The case of sex education in schools is noteworthy. It has become an important political sticking point across the region in recent years. Previous attempts or programs to include sex education in the school curriculum have triggered broad countermobilizations in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Paraguay, Chile, Costa Rica, Peru, and even in Uruguay, considered to be the least secular country. Some of these actions have ended with the withdrawal of sex education and the exclusion of mentions of gender equality in school materials and curricula ( GIANELLA-MALCA, MACHADO, and PEÑAS DEFAGO, 2017GIANELLA-MALCA, Camila; MACHADO, Marta Rodriguez de Assis; PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica. What Causes Latin America’s High Incidence of Adolescent Pregnancy? CMI Brief , [ s.l. ], v. 16, n. 9, p. 1-4, 2017. ; CORRÊA, 2018CORRÊA, Sônia. A “política do gênero”: um comentário genealógico. Cadernos Pagu , [ s.l. ], n. 53, 2018. ). For the anti-gender movement, this debate is framed around the protection of the family and children, which is connected to parental authority, religious freedom, and freedom of conscience.
Gender ideology has potentialized the scope and alliances of anti-abortion forces with other conservative groups targeting sexual morality. In reality, this strategic framing shift has meant a redefinition of the contentious field itself. The transformation happened from a field organized around the regulation of abortion and closely related issues, such as contraceptives and morning-after pills, toward a more diversified and encompassing agenda. Anti-gender campaigns are mobilized against any public policy that aims to advance sexual and gender equality. The frames centered on anti-abortion and the protection of life has expanded to integrate a larger interpretative medium, with the potential to absorb a great number of causes towards a common goal: the protection of the traditional family from “gender ideology.”
CONCLUSION
For almost twenty years since the successive electoral victories of progressive governments across the region, Latin America is currently facing a fresh cycle of reconfiguration in its political arena with social mobilization at the center, although this time from the conservative side. The formation of new conservative blocks, alliances, and movements was set in motion to react to previous advances in gender, sexual equality, and reproductive rights policies.
Based on several examples of abortion disputes in Latin-American countries, this article called attention to a broader process of renovation of the anti-abortion field in the region. It identified instances of expansions and mutations, stressing shared features to demonstrate the emergence of a significant turning point in the region. Anti-abortion actors are not only reorganizing their alliances and activism towards a broader field of anti-gender mobilization, but also enriching their strategies and frames, by emulating methods previously used by progressive social movements. Anti-abortion mobilization expanded its arenas of incidence, built alliances with official institutions, partnered with local political parties, and participated in pervasive networks of local, national, and transnational civil society organizations comprising religious, interreligious, and secular groups. They currently promote massive rallies, file lawsuits, and also participate in legal debates as amici curiae , resorting to typical political practices of progressive social movements. Moreover, their articulate interpretations of national constitutions, international treaties, and human rights discourses reveal that anti-abortion movements have been subjected to learning processes to neutralize their opponents. The expansion to the master frame of “gender ideology” conflated an array of topics and has strategically allowed the movement to enlarge the range of alliances and expand the scope of its incidence.
The characteristics of anti-abortion movements in other world regions indicate that these movements are transnationally connected ( PEÑAS DEFAGO, MORÁN FAÚNDES, and VAGGIONE, 2018PEÑAS DEFAGO, María Angélica; MORÁN FAÚNDES, José Manuel; VAGGIONE, Juan Marco. Religious Conservatism on the Global Stage: Threats and Challenges for LGBTI Rights. New York: Global Philanthropy Project, 2018. ). We have described and analyzed instances that show clear signs of transformation in the field and commonalities among cases in different countries. Studies point to transnational diffusion processes in the anti-abortion field throughout the region, interacting with local conditions and impacting local disputes. It poses a series of tasks to researchers in the field. It is crucial to map the transnational networks and paths of diffusion, as well as the local processes used to internalize global repertoires. We also drew attention to the need for more empirical research to assess the regional dynamic of transnational actors. There is still a lot to be discovered and analyzed regarding forming a regional network, the internationalization of organizations, communication channels, and intermediates. A closer understanding of the dynamics of transnational trends, their local adaptations, and the interaction between national and international legal and political opportunities is crucial to comprehend the antithetical movement happening in the region, with country battles heading in opposing directions. In this sense, while we highlighted undeniable changes experienced by the anti-abortion field in the region, we also showed that more research is needed to map comparative dynamics of contention between national and regional politics, as well as to closely monitor how international diffusion interacts with the local balance of opportunities, guiding adaptations and reshaping each local setting.
Traditionally, scholars in Latin-America social movement studies have focused on progressive movements, which have capacity to gather and mobilize a wide range of lower-ranking or minority groups in response to and/or in rejection of forms of marginalization, dispossession, and inequality ( MOTTA and NILSEN, 2011MOTTA, Sara C.; NILSEN, Alf Gunvald. Social Movements and/in the Postcolonial: Dispossession, Development and Resistance in the Global South. In: MOTTA, Sara C.; NILSEN, Alf Gunvald (eds.). Social Movements in the Global South . London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. ), including trade union or labor movements, consumer mobilizations, in addition to women, anti-globalization, environmental and Indigenous and Afro Latin American people’s movements. In each of these cases, social movements have been generally regarded as “progressive actors” and not as forms of political action or as contention repertoires, historically available to be used by different actors to make claims in the public and political arenas. Although conservative and right-wing movements have increasingly gained political power and influence worldwide, there is still a lack of research and tools to understand this phenomenon. This article aims to draw attention to the complexity and richness of the changes happening in an important sector of the neoconservative alliance and to the need of broadening our understanding of those movements since they perform an important role in the democratic dynamics in the region. Understanding widespread anti-abortion/anti-gender mobilization in Latin America is also central to theorizing how the mobilization of traditional gender norms can powerfully shape political regimes and governance systems.
The lessons from Latin America could contribute to a better understanding of the broader debate on sexual and reproductive rights policies in comparative politics. If there is something to be learned from the region, it is that the battle against gender equality can be used by political groups aimed to gain or show political power, and that it has become more sophisticated and challenging to understand. However, to evaluate the urgent challenges for the feminist, LGBTQ+ and human rights movements in the region it is crucial to further investigate how anti-abortion and neoconservative actors, in general, are creatively adapting and using all instruments available in democratic political disputes, including the human rights paradigm, to pursue the dismantling of sexual and reproductive rights.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Barbara Orihuela, Martim Landgraf, and Matheus de Barros for their research assistance, the editor, and the anonymous reviewers for their essential contributions to this article. They also would like to thank The Research Council of Norway – Abortion Rights Lawfare for the financial support.
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1
Brown (2019)BROWN, Wendy. In the Ruins of Neoliberalism: The Rise of Antidemocratic Politics in The West. New York: Columbia University Press, 2019. 264 p. revised her theoretical proposal. She now proposes that more than a confluence, the foundations of current neoconservatism and its defense of tradition are at the very roots of neoliberal thought.
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2
In Argentina, since 2021, abortion is allowed until the fourteenth gestational week. After that, it is only permitted in case of rape or to preserve the woman’s health or life. In Mexico, in 2021, the Supreme Court issued a decision that allows abortion within a short period of time (early pregnancy). In Colombia, in 2022, the Constitutional Court issued a decision that allows abortion until the twenty-fourth gestational week. Cf. Center for Reproductive Rights (2021).
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3
In Latin America and in the Caribbean, there are laws that impose the total prohibition of abortion in Suriname, Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, and Haiti ( CENTER FOR REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS, 2021CENTER FOR REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS. The World’s Abortion Laws. Center for Reproductive Rights , [ s.l. ], 2021. Available at: https://reproductiverights.org/maps/worlds-abortion-laws/?country=PER&category[1348]=1348&category[1349]=1349. Accessed on: April 11, 2022.
https://reproductiverights.org/maps/worl... ). -
4
In this article, we used the general term “Evangelical” without ignoring the fact it is actually less uniform than it looks and is composed of different churches. In recent years, many Protestants and Pentecostals have preferred to identify themselves by the specific name of their denomination and by the generic term “Christian” ( ALMEIDA, 2017ALMEIDA, Ronaldo de. A onda quebrada: evangélicos e conservadorismo. Cadernos Pagu , [ s. l. ], n. 50, 2017, Dossiê Conservadorismo, Direitos, Moralidades e Violência. Available at: https://www.scielo.br/j/cpa/a/Cr9ShrVJbCWsDHMrxTDm3wb/abstract/?lang=pt. Accessed on: April 13, 2022.
https://www.scielo.br/j/cpa/a/Cr9ShrVJbC... ). -
5
See Partido Celeste (s.d.).
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6
See Partido Republicano (s.d.).
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7
In the US, disability rights advocates have a history of disagreement on the issue of abortion rights. Although they may be pro-choice or pro-life, many disability rights advocates agree that abortions should not be used to discriminate against children who may be born with disabilities and have concerns about abortion resulting in discrimination against persons with disabilities ( SHAFFER, 2009SHAFFER, Bret. The Right to Life, the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, and Abortion. Penn State International Law Review , [ s.l. ], v. 28, n. 2, 265-287, 2009. Available at: http://elibrary.law.psu.edu/psilr/vol28/iss2/5. Accessed on: April 18, 2022.
http://elibrary.law.psu.edu/psilr/vol28/... , p. 271). -
8
See, for example, the new pro-life doctrine published in Brazil by jurist Ives Gandra Martins et al. (2020)MARTINS, Ives Gandra da Silva; BIAGINI, João Carlos, BERTELLI, Luiz Gonzaga; CARVALHO, Paulo de Barros (coords.). Liberdade religiosa e liberdade de expressão . São Paulo: UJUCASP/Noeses, 2020. .
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9
Lynn Morgan (2021b)MORGAN, Lynn. Global Anti-Abortion Coalition Targets the Organization of American States. NACLA , [ s.l. ], 4 jun. 2021b. Available at: https://nacla.org/news/2021/06/04/global-anti-abortion-coalition-targets-organization-american-states. Accessed on: April 14, 2022.
https://nacla.org/news/2021/06/04/global... lists the constitutional amendment approved in 2021 in Honduras as part of a coordinated effort to fortify national constitutions and insulate them from international human rights law.
Publication Dates
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Publication in this collection
21 Nov 2022 -
Date of issue
Oct 2022
History
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Received
28 June 2021 -
Accepted
02 May 2022