Population Council Research that makes a difference

Banner photo: Council president Peter Donaldson talking to a reporter at a 2008 event in Pakistan.

American Public Health Association
137th Annual Meeting & Exposition
7–11 November 2009

Abstract

Exploring abortion knowledge and opinion among lawyers, an important yet overlooked stakeholder group in Mexico (Abstract no. 204481)
Katherine S. Wilson, Sandra Garcia, and Claudia Diaz

Background
Mexico has received international attention for legalizing first-trimester abortions in Mexico City in 2007; however, abortion remains a divisive issue, and many women are denied legal abortion. Lawyers are important for promoting/criminalizing abortion, yet little is known about where they stand on abortion.

Objectives
(1) Assess abortion knowledge and opinion among criminal lawyers in Mexico; (2) Assess willingness to help women who are denied legal abortion.

Methods
We administered a quantitative survey of abortion knowledge, attitudes, and practices among a sample of lawyers in conservative and progressive regions (Leon, Tijuana, Tlaxcala, Mexico City). Following a pilot to assess feasibility, we recruited lawyers via public ministries and listings of private firms. All data were analyzed in SPSS.

Results
250 lawyers participated, 53 percent were public-sector and 47 percent were private-sector attorneys. The majority were men (70%). The average age was 40 and average years practicing was 15. Ninety percent responded correctly that abortion is illegal in Mexico except in specific circumstances. Only 34 percent of Mexico City lawyers (none from elsewhere) mentioned spontaneously that abortion is legal in the capital, though 61 percent supported this. Only 10 percent knew a lawyer who had represented a woman in a case of abortion service denial. Interestingly, 84 percent said that they were ready to defend a woman in such a case while the rest refused for moral or religious reasons.

Conclusion
Although Mexican lawyers have limited knowledge of abortion laws, most support legal abortion in some cases and the Mexico City law. Lawyers should be mobilized for legal abortion advocacy in legally restricted countries.

Learning objectives
(1) Describe three characteristics of Mexican lawyers’ understanding and opinion of abortion that have application for reproductive health policy; (2) Provide two reasons why lawyers are a key stakeholder group to include when promoting abortion legalization and legal abortion services; (3) Describe two ways for overcoming methodological challenges to recruiting this group in abortion research.


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