As part of a global liberalising trend, the last two decades have seen abortion decriminalised in each of Australia’s States and Territories. In this article, we focus on New South Wales (NSW) – the country’s most populous jurisdiction – and locate the State’s abortion law reform in its global context. Abortion was decriminalised in NSW in 2019. As part of this, the State introduced a new legal framework that continues the long history of exceptionalising abortion in the legal regulation of heath care. Furthermore, while decriminalisation is a necessary modernising reform, it is not a guarantee of improved access to services. This has been the experience in a number of decriminalised jurisdictions, including NSW. In this, we argue that services remain simultaneously over- and under-regulated. Responding to this, and centring public responsibility for abortion care, we propose a model designed to advance universal access to abortion services. In this regard, there remains a central role for law and policy in improving health equity. In addressing the role of law in post-decriminalisation jurisdictions, we advance understandings of law as a determinant of health.
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