Abstract
Over the last century, US policymakers have implemented laws, policies, and programs, such as abstinence-only sex education
programs, that are specifically aimed at preserving the sexual purity of teenage girls while maintaining parental authority
over them. The most recent case is the policy of restricting teen girls’ access to emergency contraception, which is now available
over-the-counter (i.e., without a prescription) to women over the age of 18. Using the case of emergency contraception as
an example, the author discusses how contemporary reproductive health policy in the USA is not only influenced by this history
of governmental regulation but also by the ingrained cultural fears and anxieties about teenage sexuality and reproduction
that motivate these actions. The author shows how policy narrative analysis in particular was a useful tool in revealing assumptions
driving the policy to restrict teen girls’ access to emergency contraception, and how it allowed her to predict that teen
girls would be placed at the center of debate when many of her reproductive health colleagues mistakenly assumed that emergency
contraception would be granted over-the-counter status without controversy.
programs, that are specifically aimed at preserving the sexual purity of teenage girls while maintaining parental authority
over them. The most recent case is the policy of restricting teen girls’ access to emergency contraception, which is now available
over-the-counter (i.e., without a prescription) to women over the age of 18. Using the case of emergency contraception as
an example, the author discusses how contemporary reproductive health policy in the USA is not only influenced by this history
of governmental regulation but also by the ingrained cultural fears and anxieties about teenage sexuality and reproduction
that motivate these actions. The author shows how policy narrative analysis in particular was a useful tool in revealing assumptions
driving the policy to restrict teen girls’ access to emergency contraception, and how it allowed her to predict that teen
girls would be placed at the center of debate when many of her reproductive health colleagues mistakenly assumed that emergency
contraception would be granted over-the-counter status without controversy.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-12
- DOI 10.1007/s13178-011-0068-8
- Authors
- Kimala Price, Department of Women’s Studies, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Dr., San Diego, CA 92182-6030, USA
- Journal Sexuality Research and Social Policy
- Online ISSN 1553-6610
- Print ISSN 1868-9884