Abstract
Little is known about how, in conservative societies, people of faith who support access to abortion, transgress spaces that assume anti-abortion values and norms. This qualitative study, set in Northern Ireland, seeks to identify how prochoice persons of faith transgress dominant religious positions, through the application of a Foucauldian feminist framework. Regulation of abortion in Northern Ireland vis-à-vis the UK is, and always has been, transgressive. The Abortion Act 1967, which allows for abortion in Great Britain, was never extended to Northern Ireland. Then in 2019, when abortion law in Northern Ireland was finally reformed, these reforms went above and beyond the GB framework becoming the first part of the UK to achieve decriminalisation. This legal change, introduced by Westminster, has been opposed by some policymakers in Northern Ireland who wish for anti-abortion norms to dominate. Within this context we explore how the power/knowledge nexus, and self-regulation are experienced by people of faith who are prochoice; how reverse discourse seeks to subvert hegemonic discourses; and identify lessons to be learned. Transgression results in a ‘belonging-paradox’, within which prochoice individuals feel simultaneously ‘half in, half out’ of their faith community as a result of its anti-abortion stance. Participants experienced cultural intimidation and felt silenced in faith spaces. We conclude safe that spaces for those who feel isolated due to their transgressive prochoice views, and for those unsure of their position, are essential.
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