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Reproductive
Exploitation
By
Jess DelBalzo and Bryony Lake
In
The Handmaid's Tale, Margaret Atwood depicted a futuristic
society in which fertile young women were held captive and used
to bear children for sterile, upper-class wives. The scenario sounds
extreme, but sadly, it is not as fictional as one might hope. Vulnerable
young women fall victim to reproductive exploitation every day,
even in our industrialized North American world.
Exploitation
commonly occurs when a powerless group of individuals possesses
something that other, more powerful individuals covet. It is nearly
unavoidable in a capitalist society, where financial success is
often achieved at the expense of innocent men, women, and children.
The
exploitation of women, specificially, is not a foreign concept to
most of us. For decades, human rights activists have rallied against
deplorable working conditions, child prostitution, sexual slavery,
and other devastating practices that abuse disadvantaged members
of society. Why, then, has reproductive exploitation been ignored?
In
its most common form, reproductive exploitation is used as a tool
of the billion-dollar adoption industry. Well-protected by donations
from satisfied adopters, large payments from would-be adopters,
and of course the religious and fundamentalist organizations that
promote the industry, few people have the opportunity to understand
adoption for the business it is.
Advertised
as an alternative for infertile couples who desperately want to
be "parents," demand for children (and mothers to birth
them) is high. Finding pregnant women who are eager to hand their
newborn babies over to strangers is next to impossible, and so adoption
workers have taken to using coercive tactics against young, poor,
and otherwise vulnerable expectant mothers. These mothers-to-be
are told that they are selfish if they express the natural desire
to keep their children, told that they will quickly get on with
their lives and bear other children when they are older/wealthier/married,
told that there is no other option available to them. They are not
informed of the devastating effect adoption often has on children,
nor are they told of the damage adoption will likely inflict on
their own psyches. Adoption workers do not care about the well-being
of mothers or children, though they may put on a good act to convince
expectant parents that their motives are pure. They care about profits,
about the image their business is presenting to powerful, potential
customers. And there you have it: reproductive exploitation.
Consider
how easily the following quotes about sexual exploitation can be
altered to reflect the tactics of the adoption industry:
From
http://www.caseyonline.org/sexploit.htm:
"Have
you ever heard a child say, "When I grow up, I want to be
a prostitute?" For children and youth, working the streets
is not a choice. Their lack of life experience and naivety about
where the road to the street leads precludes their ability to
make a conscious, informed choice."
Now,
slightly re-worded:
"Have
you ever heard a little girl say, 'When I grow up, I want to be
a birthmother?' For children and youth, surrendering a baby to
adoption is not a choice. Their lack of life experience and naivety
about the pregnancy/motherhood continuum precludes their ability
to make a conscious, informed choice."
And
from http://www.mcf.gov.bc.ca/youth:
"A
sexually exploited youth is someone who is under the age of 18,
who has been manipulated or forced into prostitution through perceived
affection and belonging, and in return receives drugs, narcotics,
money, food and/or shelter."
With
a bit of re-wording:
"A
reproductively-exploited youth is someone who is under the age
of 18, who has been manipulated or forced into surrendering her
baby through perceived affection, approval, and promises that
the well-being of her baby depends on the baby being turned over
to unrelated strangers at birth; and in return receives coverage
of medical expenses, shelter, and promises that she can return
to pre-pregnant life and will "get over it.'"
Of
course, reproductive exploitation is not limited to women under
the age of 18. Older women are equally at risk, especially when
they are poor, unmarried and/or emotionally vulnerable. Just as
older women can be sexually exploited, they too can be taken advantage
of for their fertility.
Though reproductive exploitation
has yet to be acknowledged in mainstream society, its existence
cannot be denied. Millions of women have been exploited for their
fertility in the past 50 years, and millions more will fall prey
to such exploitation if measures are not taken to protect them.
As
a society, we cannot ethically work to prevent sexual exploitation
while allowing women to be exploited by another, equally violent
industry. Fertile women who do not wish to become pregnant must
be granted access to accurate information about sexual issues, pregnancy,
and birth control, as well as access to contraceptives. Women who
become pregnant either by choice or by chance must be treated with
respect regardless of their age, financial situation, or marital
status. They must be informed of their rights and given access to
all available resources to help them raise their children. They
must be armed with information about any decision they make. And
above all, they must not be coerced, lied to, or shamed into believing
that adoption is their only option. These protections against reproductive
exploitation must be made into law.
Now-powerless
fertile women will be empowered. Their children will be treated
as human beings, rather than as "product" to be sold.
The only loser will be the adoption industry - and when you look
at it that way, everyone wins.
"In
order to drive a car you must be of a certain age, to drink you
must be a certain age, to have your own credit card or even your
own bank account without parent signatures you must be a certain
age, in order to join the army you must be of a certain age -
yet government allows very young vulnerable single mothers to
sign a legally-binding document handing over their own flesh-and-blood,
another human life, to complete strangers." - Claudia Ganzon,
natural mom searching for the daughter she was separated from
in 1982.
Copyright 2003 © Jess DelBalzo and Bryony Lake
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