5:36 AM Abortion laws - Psychology Wiki | ||||
This article needs rewriting to enhance its relevance to psychologists. . Please help to improve this page yourself if you can.. International status of abortion law -- Legal on demand -- Legal for rape, maternal life, health, mental health, socioecomic factors, and/or fetal defects -- Legal for or illegal with exception for rape, maternal life, health, fetal defects, and/or mental health -- Illegal with exception for rape, maternal life, health, and/or mental health -- Illegal with exception for maternal life, health, and/or mental health -- Illegal with no exceptions -- Varies by region -- No information By the early 20th century, many countries had begun to legalize abortions when performed to protect the life of the woman, and in some cases to protect the health of the woman. Under Vladimir Lenin, the Soviet Union legalized all abortions in 1920. but this was fully reversed in 1936 by Joseph Stalin in order to increase population growth. Iceland was the first Western country to legalize therapeutic abortion under limited circumstances, doing so in 1935. and the earliest country to do so without recriminalizing it later. Only a handful of countries mostly in Scandinavia —decriminalized abortion before Britain did so in 1967. Other countries soon followed, including Canada (1969 ), the United States (1973 in most states, pursuant to the federal Supreme Court decision which legalized abortion nationwide), France (1975 ), Austria (1975 ),New Zealand (1977 ), Italy (1978 ) and the Netherlands (1980 ). However, these countries vary greatly in the circumstances under which abortion is permitted. In 1975. the West German Supreme Court struck down a law legalizing abortion, holding that they contradict the constitution's human rights guarantees. After Germany's reunification, despite the legal status of abortion in the former East Germany, a compromise was reached which deemed most abortions illegal but does not penalize it under certain circumstances. In addition to national and regional laws, there are multi-national and international treaties, conventions, and laws that may actually be enforced on or within signatory nations. However, there is an inherent difficulty in the enforcement of international law due to the issue that state sovereignty poses. As such, the effectiveness of even binding multi-national efforts to legislate the rights to life and liberty in general, or abortion in specific, is difficult to measure. Examples of such efforts that have or might have bearing for abortion law, nationally or internationally, include:
The following series of tables present the current abortion legislation of the world's nations as divided by continent. Actual access to abortion may vary significantly on the basis of geography. income, cost, health care. social factors, and other issues. Many jurisdictions also place other restrictions on abortion access, including waiting periods, the provision of information, the assent of multiple doctors, and spousal or parental notification . Legend
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