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'[E]ven in our fear […] we wanted to do this': feminist organising for abortion in Africa as palimpsestic

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'[E]ven in our fear […] we wanted to do this': feminist organising for abortion in Africa as palimpsestic. / Berro Pizzarossa, Lucía; Coast, Ernestina; Kareithi, Wanjiru et al.
In: Culture, Health and Sexuality, 13.02.2025, p. 1-17.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Berro Pizzarossa, L., Coast, E., Kareithi, W., & Duffy, D. (2025). '[E]ven in our fear […] we wanted to do this': feminist organising for abortion in Africa as palimpsestic. Culture, Health and Sexuality, 1-17. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/13691058.2025.2458081

Vancouver

Berro Pizzarossa L, Coast E, Kareithi W, Duffy D. '[E]ven in our fear […] we wanted to do this': feminist organising for abortion in Africa as palimpsestic. Culture, Health and Sexuality. 2025 Feb 13;1-17. Epub 2025 Feb 13. doi: 10.1080/13691058.2025.2458081

Author

Berro Pizzarossa, Lucía ; Coast, Ernestina ; Kareithi, Wanjiru et al. / '[E]ven in our fear […] we wanted to do this' : feminist organising for abortion in Africa as palimpsestic. In: Culture, Health and Sexuality. 2025 ; pp. 1-17.

Bibtex

@article{b42955c1b687495ea33aff0933e98dd6,
title = "'[E]ven in our fear […] we wanted to do this': feminist organising for abortion in Africa as palimpsestic",
abstract = "Activism for abortion rights and access in Africa is a vibrant and diverse movement that has become more prominent in recent years. Drawing on qualitative data from interviews with members and allies of the MAMA network (an African transnational pro-abortion activist network), this article explores the evolving landscape of feminist abortion rights activism in Africa, examining how activists navigate and reshape this complex terrain influenced by enduring historical, socio-cultural and political legacies. Employing the concept of the palimpsest as a lens, we examine how feminist organising for abortion rights and access unfolds in a context where historic scripts that limit African womens'-and African feminists'-agency have been imperfectly erased. We argue that activists record their experiences, strategies, successes and challenges on the societal landscape, creating a cumulative and evolving record, similar to a palimpsest, in which each contribution builds upon and reinterprets the layers that precede it. By foregrounding the interconnectedness of past and present struggles, the article contributes to deeper understanding of the complexities of feminist abortion activism in Africa, showing how these efforts contribute to broader struggles for gender and reproductive justice across the continent.",
author = "{Berro Pizzarossa}, Luc{\'i}a and Ernestina Coast and Wanjiru Kareithi and Deirdre Duffy",
year = "2025",
month = feb,
day = "13",
doi = "10.1080/13691058.2025.2458081",
language = "English",
pages = "1--17",
journal = "Culture, Health and Sexuality",
issn = "1369-1058",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - '[E]ven in our fear […] we wanted to do this'

T2 - feminist organising for abortion in Africa as palimpsestic

AU - Berro Pizzarossa, Lucía

AU - Coast, Ernestina

AU - Kareithi, Wanjiru

AU - Duffy, Deirdre

PY - 2025/2/13

Y1 - 2025/2/13

N2 - Activism for abortion rights and access in Africa is a vibrant and diverse movement that has become more prominent in recent years. Drawing on qualitative data from interviews with members and allies of the MAMA network (an African transnational pro-abortion activist network), this article explores the evolving landscape of feminist abortion rights activism in Africa, examining how activists navigate and reshape this complex terrain influenced by enduring historical, socio-cultural and political legacies. Employing the concept of the palimpsest as a lens, we examine how feminist organising for abortion rights and access unfolds in a context where historic scripts that limit African womens'-and African feminists'-agency have been imperfectly erased. We argue that activists record their experiences, strategies, successes and challenges on the societal landscape, creating a cumulative and evolving record, similar to a palimpsest, in which each contribution builds upon and reinterprets the layers that precede it. By foregrounding the interconnectedness of past and present struggles, the article contributes to deeper understanding of the complexities of feminist abortion activism in Africa, showing how these efforts contribute to broader struggles for gender and reproductive justice across the continent.

AB - Activism for abortion rights and access in Africa is a vibrant and diverse movement that has become more prominent in recent years. Drawing on qualitative data from interviews with members and allies of the MAMA network (an African transnational pro-abortion activist network), this article explores the evolving landscape of feminist abortion rights activism in Africa, examining how activists navigate and reshape this complex terrain influenced by enduring historical, socio-cultural and political legacies. Employing the concept of the palimpsest as a lens, we examine how feminist organising for abortion rights and access unfolds in a context where historic scripts that limit African womens'-and African feminists'-agency have been imperfectly erased. We argue that activists record their experiences, strategies, successes and challenges on the societal landscape, creating a cumulative and evolving record, similar to a palimpsest, in which each contribution builds upon and reinterprets the layers that precede it. By foregrounding the interconnectedness of past and present struggles, the article contributes to deeper understanding of the complexities of feminist abortion activism in Africa, showing how these efforts contribute to broader struggles for gender and reproductive justice across the continent.

U2 - 10.1080/13691058.2025.2458081

DO - 10.1080/13691058.2025.2458081

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 39945564

SP - 1

EP - 17

JO - Culture, Health and Sexuality

JF - Culture, Health and Sexuality

SN - 1369-1058

ER -