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Friday, November 8, 2019

A timely sequel to "The Handmaid's Tale" - book review


"The Testaments"
by Margaret Atwood
Chatto & Windus, London
2019


"The Testaments," Margaret Atwood's 2019 Booker Prize-winning novel, is her response to the question of readers of "The Handmaid's Tale:" how did Gilead fall? She's had 35 years to come up with the answer, and she doesn't disappoint.

Atwood uses a similar narrative technique to the one in Handmaid's Tale, also set as historical documents served up at a history symposium. The difference is that this time, they encompass three perspectives: Aunt Lydia, from the generation that lived through the triumph of Gilead, and two girls of the next generation, one brought up in a Gilead household, to become a Gilead wife; the other, from across the border in free Canada.

Although a fan of the first season of the companion TV series, I found the violence and hopelessness in the second season too much to keep watching. "The Testaments" didn't dwell on the same ground covered in "The Handmaid's Tale," although it alluded to it. In my opinion this made it an easier read, and allowed it to explore other perspectives on compliance and resistance to arbitrary power.

I'm trying to avoid spoilers, so I'll just say Atwood does a great job at not only answering that question, and others raised by The Handmaid's Tale. In her acknowledgements, she thanks World War II resisters she has known - and their influence is apparent in the text. Atwood also refers to the axiom that guided the writing of both books: that no event should appear that hasn't actually happened in human history. In this sense, although "The Testaments" is a work of fiction, it is also a work of history, and a manual for resisting fascism, revealed in its virulently misogynistic theocratic form - in fictional Gilead, and in a growing number of countries around the world today.

Tuesday, August 13, 2019

NSW Reproductive Health Care Reform Bill 2019


My submission to the parliamentary committee


Dr Kamala Emanuel
11 August 2019

As a NSW abortion provider and an abortion rights advocate, and as a woman who has undergone abortion in NSW, I support the Reproductive Health Care Reform Bill.

Even with the best access to sex education, contraception and emergency contraception (which NSW doesn't have), there is no pro-active way for people engaged in potentially reproductive sex but not prepared for parenthood to guarantee they won't become pregnant. And sometimes, wanted, planned pregnancies become impossible to continue, whether for health reasons or any number of personal crises. Like contraception, miscarriage and childbirth, abortion is a part of reproductive life; between a fifth and a quarter of women and people with a uterus

Friday, July 5, 2019

Gender-biased sex selection and abortion rights


As an abortion provider and abortion rights advocate, I follow abortion news, which means sometimes links like this one1, to an article decrying abortion for sex selection, appear in my inbox.

What I have noticed is that abortion opponents argue against sex selection abortion in order to establish a precedent that allows the state to determine that certain kinds of abortion are not permissible. If the state can override the decision of the pregnant woman in one instance, it undermines the central contention of abortion rights activists that the decision to continue or terminate a pregnancy belongs to the pregnant person2.

Very often, arguments will be couched in feminist terms. Whether crudely3 or subtly4, they seek to use feminist language of opposition to discrimination to appear to take a feminist high ground - in a completely anti-feminist attempt to undermine support for women's and pregnant people's autonomy. Their arguments only work if we accept the premise that the foetus with XX chromosomes or with ultrasonic evidence of female reproductive organs is a person with a right to life, a girl being killed because of her gender. In passing, I will point out that there is more to determination of sex than 2 combinations of sex chromosomes, and more to determination of gender than anatomical sex. But even if, on the whole, embryos with XX chromosomes, or foetuses with female reproductive anatomy, would, if born, be girls, are they, in utero, girls with rights beyond the right of the pregnant person, rights that trump the right of the woman or pregnant person to determine whether or not to continue the pregnancy? Opponents of abortion don't (and can't) prove this - they just mobilise legitimate indignation and anger at discrimination against girls and women, in an attempt to get it to spill over into an attack on abortion rights.

Gender-biased sex selection5 is a problem. But it's not the problem opponents of all abortion would have us think. It is a manifestation of the same devaluing of girls and women that underpins our oppression. In the societies where it is documented, the combination of influences on gender-biased sex selection usually includes deeply held values about the worth of sons over daughters, the role of sons providing for parents in their old age, women's relative exclusion from the paid workforce and lower pay where included, discriminatory inheritance patterns and (at least in parts of India) marriage customs such as the expectation brides' families will provide a dowry.

What this means is that if it is to be effectively confronted, the social context needs to be changed. Not surprisingly, measurable impacts on reversing son preference have been demonstrated by social measures affecting the underlying factors. Economic security in old age (in the form of savings or pensions), women's participation in the workforce, changes to the rights and responsibilities of women in relation to their family of birth, and media campaigns promoting the value of daughters have all had an impact.6

One important finding reported in a UN interagency statement on tackling gender-biased sex selection7 was that educational programs that stimulate discussion and allow for participants to share their experiences and thoughts in relation to conflicting values are more empowering and effective than those based on judgemental criticism of "bad" behaviour.

There is evidence of prenatal sex selection taking place in Australia, predominantly among women born overseas, most notably from India, China and South-East Asia.8 A 2018 study of births in Victoria found that in these populations, the male/female ratio at birth is significantly above the biological norm of 105:100.

Banning abortion performed for sex selection is only likely to put obstacles in the way of women and pregnant people seeking care and support, and risks harming already marginalised women.

The issues that should be of concern are not whether to ban abortion performed to enable sex selection, or to prevent women from undergoing blood tests or ultrasound examinations that may enable them to know about their pregnancy's chromosomal sex or reproductive anatomy. For healthcare providers in particular, the point at which a woman is making a decision to abort a pregnancy is not the point at which to refuse care or impose judgement. It is a point for promoting our patients' health and autonomy, including by the provision of safe abortion if that is the pregnant person's decision.

What we should be concerned about (healthcare professionals and wider society alike) is to identify and support women at risk of coercion into abortion, or facing harassment, violence or other kinds of pressure if they give birth to girls. We should support efforts, particularly efforts by young women of affected communities, to challenge and transform the culture of son preference.

We'll know we're succeeding when the sex ratio at birth returns to the biological norm - not by taking measures that undermine women's rights, but by implementing those with the capacity to enhance them.



1 https://caldronpool.com/researchers-say-discrimination-against-women-starts-in-the-womb. This one is particularly obnoxious, implying in its sub-heading that researchers who identified prenatal sex selection in a cohort of Australian women conclude that abortion is not beneficial to women, when that is, rather, the presupposition of the authors of the article and an opponent of abortion, nothing to do with the study, who they misleadingly quote.
2 I use the terms woman and pregnant person in recognition that while most people capable of becoming pregnant are women, some pregnant people are trans men and some are non-binary people or people with other gender identities.
3 E.g., https://caldronpool.com/researchers-say-discrimination-against-women-starts-in-the-womb
4 E.g., https://lozierinstitute.org/sex-selection-abortion-the-real-war-on-women
5 As distinct from abortion to avoid passing on sex-chromosome-linked diseases or conditions.
6 https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/44577/9789241501460_eng.pdf
7 https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/44577/9789241501460_eng.pdf
8 https://academic.oup.com/ije/article/47/6/2025/5057663

Saturday, June 1, 2019

Dutton out

Sportsbet favours Labor to be elected to the federal seat of Dickson in the May 18 federal election. The seat is currently held by the minister for cruelty to refugees, Peter Dutton. Across Australia, people have had a gutful of the heartlessness.

The Refugee Action Collective held  a protest outside everyone's least-liked potato's electorate office on May 11, attracting a lot of support from passersby.

As RAC spokesperson Mark Gillespie pointed out, the fight for refugees' rights will be boosted by a defeat of Dutton, but it will be far from over, as the cruelty has bipartisan support. He announced a rally to be held on July 19, the 6th anniversary of Rudd (Labor) that asylum-seekers arriving by boat would "never, ever" be settled in Australia.

I had a few words to say. When women are forced to become refugees, they don't leave the patriarchy behind them. When the Nauru detention centre was being prepared, the head of it resigned, warning that women would nor be safe from sexual assault there. Scott Morrison and Peter Dutton are responsible for letting that cone to pass.

We won't stop till all the refugees are free.






Sunday, April 28, 2019

Word art

Laser etch or charcoal sketch
Razor or quill
With words and skill
We craft
     Hammers
Leaning towards meaning
Like a phototroph to light
Or nailing it
     To shape reality.