Interrogating medical tourism: Ireland, abortion, and mobility rights

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Date
2011
Authors
Gilmartin, Mary
White, Allen
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The University of Chicago Press
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Abstract
Medical tourism in Ireland, like in many Western states, is built around assumptions about individual agency, choice, possibility, and mobility. One specific form of medical tourism—the flow of women from Ireland traveling in order to secure an abortion—disrupts and contradicts these assumptions. One legacy of the bitter, contentious political and legal battles surrounding abortion in Ireland in the 1980s and 1990s has been securing the right of mobility for all pregnant Irish citizens to cross international borders to secure an abortion. However, these mobility rights are contingent upon nationality, social class, and race, and they have enabled successive Irish governments to avoid any responsibility for providing safe, legal, and affordable abortion services in Ireland. Nearly twenty years after the X case discussed here, the pregnant female body moving over international borders—entering and leaving the state—is still interpreted as problematic and threatening to the Irish state.
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Medical tourism , Mobility rights , Abortion issues Ireland
Citation
MARY GILMARTIN & ALLEN WHITE 2011. Interrogating Medical Tourism: Ireland, Abortion, and Mobility Rights. Signs, 36 (2), 275-280. doi: 10.1086/655907
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© 2010 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.