The Rise of Liberal Attitudes Toward Abortion in Iran
Downloads
In Iran, abortion is illegal and only permitted under certain circumstances. This article aims to examine changes in attitudes toward abortion and their correlates over the past two decades, using data from the 2000, 2005, and 2020 Iran World Values Survey (WVS). The results show that over the past two decades, approval of abortion has increased, with recent Iranian birth cohorts having a more positive attitude toward abortion compared to older generations. Multivariate results indicate that people with lower religiosity and more positive attitudes toward gender equality and modern family values hold more favorable views on abortion. Given the growth of liberal attitudes toward abortion, a rising trend in its incidence in Iran is expected. Therefore, the government must consider revising the legality of abortion to avert health risks for women seeking the procedure.
Downloads
Abbasi-Shavazi, M.J., Sadeghi, R. (2013). Demographic and Socio-economic Status of Youth in I.R. Iran, Working paper for United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).
Abdollahyan, H., and M. Fallah. (2008). A qualitative analysis of intentional abortion and phenomenology of women’s lived experience: some case studies of women in Tehran, Journal of Population Association of Iran, 3(5):55-80.
Adamczyk, A. (2013). The effect of personal religiosity on attitudes toward abortion, divorce, and gender equality- does cultural context make a difference? EurAmerica, 43(1):213-253.
Aghayari Hir, T., and A. H, Mehryar. 2007. Estimation of induced abortion rates in Iran: Application of proximate determinants model, Journal of Population Association of Iran, 2(3):61-91.
Ajzen, I. & Fishbein, M. (1980) Understanding Attitudes and Predicting Social Behavior. Prentice Hall, Englewood-Cliffs, NJ.
Bagi, M., and Abbasi-Shavazi, M.J. (2020). Household formation and living arrangements of the youth in Iran: Evidence of delay in the transition to independent living, Journal of Cultural Studies Communication, 16(59):243-274.
Barringer, M. N., Sumerau, J.E., & Gay, D.A. (2020). Generational Variation in Young Adults’ Attitudes toward Legal Abortion: Contextualizing the Role of Religion. Social Currents, 7(3):279-296.
Bearak, J., A. Popinchalk, B. Ganatra, A-B. Moller, Özge. Tunçalp, C. Beavin, L. Kwok, L. Alkema. (2020). Unintended pregnancy and abortion by income, region, and the legal status of abortion: estimates from a comprehensive model for 1990-2019, The Lancet Global Health, 8(9):1152-1161.
Bongaarts, J., and Charles F. Westoff. (2000). The Potential Role of Contraception in reducing abortion. Studies in Family Planning, 31(3):193-202.
Cook EA., Jelen T.G., and Wilcox C. (1993). Generational Differences in Attitudes toward Abortion, American Politics Quarterly, 21(1):31-53.
Cragun, R.T., & Sumerau, J.E. (2014). Men Who Hold More Egalitarian Attitudes toward Women Working Outside the Home in the US: Who Are They? Human Prospect, 4(1):10-24.
Debela, T.F., and Mekuria M.S. (2018). Knowledge and attitude of women toward the legalization of abortion in the selected town of Ethiopia: a cross-sectional study, Reproductive Health, 15(1):1-9.
Erfani. A. (2015). Curbing publicly-funded family planning services in Iran: Who is affected? Journal of Family Planning and Reproductive Health Care, 43(1): 37-43.
Erfani, A. (2016). Levels, Trends, and Correlates of Abortion in Tehran, Iran: 2009–2014, International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, 42(2):93-101.
Erfani, A. (2017). Low fertility intention in Tehran, Iran: The role of attitudes, norms, and perceived behavioral control, Journal of Biosocial Science, 49(3): 292–308.
Erfani, A. (2019). Iran’s second demographic transition and below-replacement fertility: Implications for population policies. Istanbul University Journal of Sociology, 39(2):475-478.
Erfani, A., H, Hosseini. (2019). The 2018 Hamedan Survey of Marriage and Fertility is, Joint Research project between Nipissing University (Canada) and Bu-Ali Sina University (Iran), Hamedan, Iran.
Erfani, A., and J, Shojaei. (2018). New Evidence on Induced Abortion in Tehran, Iran: Rates, Causes, and Changes. The Iranian Journal of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Infertility, 21(3):64-77.
Farash, N., Sadeghi, R. and Ramzi, N. (2020). Social and cultural determinants of students' attitudes toward abortion. Women's Strategic Studies, 22(87):109-130.
Fish, M. Steven. (2011). Are Muslims distinctive?: A look at the evidence: Oxford University Press.
Ganatra B, Gerdts C, Rossier C, Johnson Jr B R, Tuncalp Ö, Assifi A, Sedgh G, Singh S, Bankole A, Popinchalk A, Bearak J, Kang Z, Alkema L. (2017). Global, regional, and subregional classification of abortions by safety, 2010-14: estimates from a Bayesian hierarchical model. The Lancet. Volume 390.
Hoffmann, J. P., & Johnson, S.M. (2005). Attitudes toward abortion among religious traditions in the United States: Change or continuity? Sociology of Religion, 66(2):161-182.
Hosseini, H. (2013). Socioeconomic Demography and Family Planning, Fifth Publication, Hamedan, Bu-Ali Sina University Press.
Hosseini H., Erfani. A, Nojomi. M. (2017). Factors associated with the incidence of induced abortion in Hamedan, Iran. Arch Iran Med, 20(5):282–287.
Inglehart, R., Haerpfer, C., Moreno, A., Welzel, C., Kizilova, K., Diez-Medrano, J., Lagos, B., Norris, P., Ponarin, E., Puranen, B., et al. (Eds.). (2014). World Values Survey: Round six-country-pooled data file version. JD Systems Institute. www.worldvaluessurvey.org/WVSDocumentationWV6.jsp.
Jelen, T.G. (2014). The subjective bases of abortion attitudes: A cross-national comparison of religious traditions. Politics and Religion, 7(3):550-67.
Jelen, T.G., and Wilcox, C. (2003). Causes and consequences of public attitudes toward abortion: A review and research agenda. Political Research Quarterly 56(4):489-500.
Jelen, T.G., and Wilcox, C. (2005). Continuity and change in attitudes toward abortion: Poland and the United States. Politics & Gender, 1(2):297-317.
Karimi Moughari, Z., Nazifi Nainie, M., Abbaspour, S. (2013). Evaluating the economic factors affecting employment of women in Iran using artificial neural network approach. Women's Studies Sociological and Psychological, 11(3):53-80. doi: 10.22051/jwsps.2014.1446.
Kelly, K., & Grant, L. (2007). State abortion and nonmarital birthrates in the post-welfare reform era: The impact of economic incentives on reproductive behaviors of teenage and adult women. Gender & Society, 21(6):878-904.
Loll, D., and Hall K.S. (2019). Differences in abortion attitudes by policy context and between men and women in the world values survey. Women & Health, 59(5):465-80.
Marston, C., and J, Cleland. (2003). Relationships between contraception and abortion: A review of the evidence, International Family Planning Perspectives, 29(1):6-13.
Movahed, M., Azemat, S., and Moaven Z. (2014). A study on cultural factors associated with attitudes toward abortion (Case study: 18-29 year-old youth in Shiraz city). Sociological Cultural Studies, 5(1):87-111.
Say L., Chou D., Gemmill A., Tunçalp Ö., Moller AB., Daniels JD., et al. (2014). Global Causes of Maternal Death: A WHO Systematic Analysis. The Lancet Global Health. 2(6):323-333.
Singh, S., L. Remez., G. Sedgh., L. Kwok., and T. Onda. (2017). Abortion worldwide 2017: uneven progress and unequal access, Guttmacher Institute, 2018.
Smith, T.W. (2009). An analysis of cohort differences on abortion attitudes, 1972-2006. NORC/University of Chicago.
United Nations Population Division (2020). World Population Policies 2017: Abortion laws and policies-A global assessment: Highlights (ST/ESA/SER.A/448).
Weeks, John R. (2016). Population: Introduction to Concepts and Issues, Twelfth Edition (Boston, MA: Cengage Learning).
World Health Organization (2012). Safe and unsafe induced abortion: Global and regional levels in 2008 and trends during 1995-2008, Department of Reproductive Health and Research.
Copyright (c) 2024 Hatam Hosseini, Milad Bagi
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.