Open Society and Soros Foundation
Building a Global Alliance for Open Society
about usinitiativesgrants and scholarshipsresource centernewsroom
search the site
advanced search
share  print  print
Publications

Ideas for an Open Society: Reproductive Health and Rights

Date:
May/June 2001
Source:
OSI

Stressing the need to find common ground in the abortion debate while securing policies to protect safe and legal reproductive rights for women, OSI released a paper examining the changing science, politics, and public attitudes on abortion.

"Everything about abortion in America has changed in the three decades since Roe v. Wade guaranteed a constitutional right to privacy, except the way people talk about it," said Ellen Chesler, director of OSI's Program on Reproductive Health and Rights, and author of the feature article in Ideas for an Open Society.

In the second issue of OSI's new Ideas series, Chesler, also the author of a biography on birth control pioneer Margaret Sanger, discusses the importance of emergency contraception, RU-486, and the need to lift restrictive legal provisions that govern surgical abortions in her piece, "The Abortion Debate: Finding Common Ground."

Also included in the issue is Jane Manners', "Manhattanville MIC Center: Model Neighborhood Reproductive Health Care," a case study of one of eight Maternity, Infant Care-Women's Health Services run by the City of New York that offers family planning services and prenatal care to women in low-income neighborhoods. Manners, a program associate for OSI's Governance and Public Policy program and former staff writer at Brill's Content, reports on the personalized attention that women receive at the center; each is assigned to and receives continuous care and counseling from a single physician or midwife throughout her pregnancy.

However MIC centers are prohibited from performing abortions. Manners argues that if MIC centers could offer their patients this early option, much of the emotional toll and public shame of visiting an abortion clinic and being treated by unfamiliar doctors would be alleviated. Currently, should an MIC center patient request an abortion, her doctor must refer her to a public hospital or clinic, provided the patient has Medicaid coverage.

OSI's new Ideas series, to be released six times a year, debates provocative and innovative ideas and strategies for social change to advance democratic, open society values. Written by OSI program directors, trustees, and grantees, upcoming issues will focus on overreliance on incarceration, reform of urban high schools, and other OSI projects. The premier issue of Ideas examined campaign finance reform.

back to the top of the page
share  print  print
FOLLOW OSI
Email Newsletters
News Feeds
Podcasts
Facebook
Twitter

About Us  |  Initiatives  |  Grants, Scholarships & Fellowships  |  Resource Center  |  Newsroom  |  Site Map  |  About this Site  |  Contact


Creative Commons License
Except where otherwise noted, content on this site is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative License.
©2009 Open Society Institute. Some rights reserved.

400 West 59th Street  |  New York, NY 10019, U.S.A.  |  Tel 1-212-548-0600

OSI-New York, OSI-Budapest, OSF-London, OSI-Paris and OSI-Brussels are separate organizations that operate independently
yet cooperate informally with each other. This website, a joint presentation, is intended to promote each organization’s interests.