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Abortion rights involve the legal circumstances in which a woman can obtain an abortion. Advocates seek to minimize restrictions while opponents seek to limit access. Issues include time limits, reasons for abortion, facility types, and consent for minors.
Abortion rights concern the circumstances in which a woman can obtain a legal abortion in a specific jurisdiction. Abortion is a controversial medical procedure in which a pregnancy is terminated through one of various means, including the ingestion of abortifacient drugs or a surgical procedure. Abortion is not legal in all countries and in places where it is a legal option it is often subject to significant restrictions. Abortion rights advocates typically seek to relax or minimize these restrictions on the types of abortion, the reasons for an abortion, and the length of time a woman can have an abortion. Opponents of abortion rights, on the other hand, may seek to limit all access to abortion or severely limit the circumstances in which it can be performed.
Abortion rights advocates, sometimes known as advocates of choice, generally argue that a woman has the right to determine what goes on inside her body and should be free to terminate a pregnancy. Opponents of abortion, who often describe themselves as pro-life, argue that the fetus has rights too and that these should not be ignored when making decisions about abortion. While there are members of both camps who take a hardline approach, from those who advocate the absence of almost all regulations on abortion to those who want it banned altogether, there is generally a broad spectrum of beliefs about how access to abortion should be controlled.
A significant area of abortion rights is the issue of limiting the time a woman has to request a legal abortion. In some places, women simply seek out abortion services while they are only in the early stages of pregnancy. After this period, a woman’s right to an abortion may be severely limited and may be limited to women facing medical complications. Other restrictions may include the reasons why a woman may seek an abortion, with some venues limiting her access to abortion services to cases where she is a victim of rape or incest, suffers from health problems, or there is an indication that the fetus is suffering from a genetic defect.
Other abortion rights considerations include limitations on the types of facilities where an abortion can be performed, the types of abortion procedures that can be performed, and the question of whether minors should be able to consent to an abortion. Some opponents of abortion rights seek to limit abortion services to hospitals rather than allowing them to be performed in independent outpatient clinics. Some even try to limit some abortion procedures because they are unethical or medically dangerous. A particularly contentious issue in abortion rights is whether minors should be able to consent to an abortion or should notify or receive permission from a parent or guardian before doing so. In the United States, individual states are free to set age limits for abortions, with some states requiring minors to notify their parents before having the procedure.
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