Reproductive health and the question of abortion in Botswana: a review

Type Journal Article - African Journal of Reproductive Health
Title Reproductive health and the question of abortion in Botswana: a review
Author(s)
Volume 17
Issue 4
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2013
Page numbers 26-34
URL https://journals.co.za/content/ajrh/17/4/EJC145438
Abstract
The complications of unsafe, illegal abortions are a significant cause of maternal mortality in Botswana. The stigma attached to
abortion leads some women to seek clandestine procedures, or alternatively, to carry the fetus to term and abandon the infant at
birth. I conducted research into perceptions of abortion in urban Botswana in order to understand the social and cultural obstacles
to women’s reproductive autonomy, focusing particularly on attitudes to terminating a pregnancy. I carried out 21 interviews
with female and male urban adult Batswana. This article constitutes a review of the abortion issue in Botswana based on my
research. Restrictive laws must eventually be abolished to allow women access to safe, timely abortions. My findings however,
suggest that socio-cultural factors, not punitive laws, present the greatest barriers to women seeking to terminate an unwanted
pregnancy. These factors must be addressed so that effective local solutions to unsafe abortion can be generated.

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