The Columbus Dispatch

Women can’t ‘have it all’ if abortion is not legal, safe

- Your Turn Mytheli Sreenivas

The argument that abortion is no longer needed because women can balance work and family was advanced last week before the Supreme Court.

The court is considerin­g a Mississipp­i law banning abortion after 15 weeks. Mississipp­i’s attorney general, Lynn Fitch, argued in a brief to the court that women could have successful careers while having children.

According to Fitch, the idea that abortion could help level the playing field for women, and allow them “to participat­e equally in the economic and social life of the nation,” as decided in Planned Parenthood v. Casey in 1992, was now outdated.

Women don’t need abortions, Mississipp­i’s attorney general claimed, because they already have it all.

This argument is wrong on the facts. As many parents know, the so-called balance between work and caring for your family is impossible for some people, and difficult for nearly everyone else.

The United States is one of only six nations in the world which has no federally mandated paid parental leave, and it spends far less on public preschool and daycare than other wealthy nations. When it comes to the care of young children, the expectatio­n is that parents, especially mothers, are on their own.

This hits poor women and women of color the hardest.

Studies show that women take on a heavy economic burden when they have children. Mothers lose thousands of dollars in lifetime earnings, a “motherhood penalty” that generally does not impact fathers’ incomes.

One study comparing women who were able to get an abortion with those who were denied found that women who could not get abortion care were three times more likely to be unemployed and four times more likely to have household incomes below the poverty level.

It’s true that some women can have children without losing their economic security, but our society has a long way to go before this is possible for all women. For this reason alone, abortion needs to be a choice that people can make for themselves.

People may choose abortion for many reasons, including health concerns or being unready to care for a child. A person may elect an abortion simply because they do not want to parent a child. These are all choices we must respect, and this is settled law under

the Roe v. Wade decision.

Finally, the Mississipp­i Attorney General’s argument is wrong because it fundamenta­lly misunderst­ands the meaning of gender equality.

The measure of equality cannot be limited to whether a person can raise children while holding down a job.

In 1994, the Sistersong Women of Color Reproducti­ve Justice Collective offered an expansive vision of equality through the concept of reproducti­ve justice. Reproducti­ve justice is the right to “maintain personal bodily autonomy, have children, not have children, and parent the children we have in safe and sustainabl­e communitie­s.”

Reproducti­ve justice is about each person, regardless of their gender, being able to make choices about having children. It’s about having support to raise those children. And it’s about each person’s right and ability to make decisions about their bodies and their health.

Abortion rights are one part of building a just and fair society for all people, across gender. We’re not there yet, and the Mississipp­i law takes us in the wrong direction. The right to an abortion is not outdated or unneeded. If women are truly to “have it all” and participat­e freely and fully in our society, we need legal, safe, and accessible abortion.

Mytheli Sreenivas is associate professor of history and women’s, gender and sexuality studies, as well as director of the South Asian Studies Initiative at Ohio State University.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP ?? An abortion rights supporter holds one of many signs that was displayed at a reproducti­ve rights rally at Smith Park in Jackson, Mississipp­i, Dec. 1. The U.S. Supreme Court heard a Mississipp­i case last week that directly challenges the constituti­onal right to an abortion
ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP An abortion rights supporter holds one of many signs that was displayed at a reproducti­ve rights rally at Smith Park in Jackson, Mississipp­i, Dec. 1. The U.S. Supreme Court heard a Mississipp­i case last week that directly challenges the constituti­onal right to an abortion
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