thumb|Badges from the 1970s campaigning to keep and expand the achievements of the ALRA
Abortion Rights is an advocacy organisation that promotes access to abortion in the United Kingdom. It was formed in 2003 by the merger of the Abortion Law Reform Association (ALRA) and the National Abortion Campaign (NAC). The ALRA campaigned effectively after World War II for the elimination of legal obstacles to abortion and the peak of its work was the Abortion Act 1967.
History
The "Abortion Law Reform Association" was founded in the United Kingdom in 1936 by Janet Chance, Alice Jenkins, Joan Malleson and Stella Browne.
Alice Jenkins wrote an important book titled "Law For The Rich" which was published in 1960. Her book drew attention to the double standards that faced women with unwanted pregnancies. Abortion was nominally illegal so many women had to give birth to unplanned children, however rich women could persuade their private doctors that their mental health was at risk. The doctors were then able to carry out an abortion that was denied to most women in Britain.
Lobbying for change
Vera Houghton became the chair of the ALRA in 1963 and over the next seven years she led the organisation. The ALRA's turning point was to gain the support of the Liberal Party MP David Steel, who placed a private members bill through the House of Commons to reform the laws of abortion, choosing this issue over calls to instead amend the law on plumbers or the rights of homosexuals. He cites Alice Jenkins' argument in her book "Law For The Rich" as being pivotal in his decision. Steele put forward a private members bill that was backed by the government and it resulted in the 1967 Abortion Act.
In 1974 the <nowiki>Working Women'</nowiki>s Charter" was developed by activists from the U.K. Women's Liberation and trade union movement. The charter was an attempt to bridge the gap between women's economic and social requirements, and included equal pay, an end to the glass ceiling, free contraception and access to abortion. In 1975, the Scottish politician James White introduced a bill in parliament to make abortion more difficult. A demonstration was arranged to protest at moves to restrict the then legal access to abortion. This demonstration led to the formation of National Abortion Campaign.
Abortion Rights was formed in 2003 by the merger of the Abortion Law Reform Association (ALRA) and the National Abortion Campaign (NAC).
Scottish devolution
In 2016, abortion law was devolved to the Scottish Parliament in the Scotland Act 2016.
The devolved organisation Abortion Rights Scotland is a campaigning and advocacy organisation, taking part in an annual pro-choice demo in Edinburgh on the anniversary of the Abortion Act 1967, giving evidence to the Scottish Parliament for the Safe Access Zones Bill, and taking part in the debate on decriminalization of abortion in Scotland.
See also
- National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) — American contemporary organisation
References
External links
- Scotland
- The archives of the National Abortion Campaign are available for study at the Wellcome Collection.
- The archives of the Abortion Law Reform Association are available for study at the Wellcome Collection.
