Pronatalist programmes in Eastern Europe.

Robert J. McIntyre
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引用次数: 20

Abstract

IN 1920 the Soviet government enacted an unprecedented and almost unrestricted system of provision of induced abortion on demand. Official distress over the large number of abortions performed under this system and low fertility rates led to imposition of a small fee in 1923. After years of controversy, direct administrative action was finally taken in 1935 forbidding interruption of first pregnancies and requiring a sixmonth interval between legal abortions. In June 1936 the balance of the law of i920 was substantively repealed. At the same time, a system of family allowance payments was established and child-care facilities were expanded with the explicit hope of stimulating population growth. Despite massive resort to illegal abortion, the restrictions of I935 and 1936 were not removed until I955.2 After the re-liberalization of the Soviet abortion laws in December I955, all the European socialist countries, except for the German Democratic Republic and Albania, rapidly enacted similar legislation. In each instance the change in the form and substance of the socio-legal posture towards abortion was enormous, and in each country there was an immediate and clearly visible rise in the number of abortions performed and an apparently related change in the birth and population growth rates.3 While fertility rates have fallen throughout the European world in the postwar period, in much of Eastern Europe the full legalization
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东欧的Pronatalist项目。
1920年,苏联政府制定了一项史无前例的、几乎不受限制的系统,根据需求提供人工流产。官方对在这一制度下进行的大量堕胎和低生育率感到苦恼,于是在1923年征收了一笔小额费用。经过多年的争论,1935年终于采取了直接的行政措施,禁止中断首次怀孕,并要求合法堕胎间隔6个月。1936年6月,1920年法律的其余部分被实质上废除了。同时,建立了家庭津贴支付制度,扩大了托儿设施,明确希望刺激人口增长。尽管大量诉诸非法堕胎,1935年和1936年的限制直到1955年才被取消。在1955年12月苏联重新放宽堕胎法后,除德意志民主共和国和阿尔巴尼亚外,所有欧洲社会主义国家都迅速制定了类似的立法。在每一种情况下,对堕胎的社会法律态度的形式和实质都发生了巨大的变化,在每一个国家,堕胎的数量都有了立即和明显的增加,出生率和人口增长率显然也有了相应的变化虽然战后欧洲各国的生育率都有所下降,但在东欧的大部分地区,婚姻完全合法化
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Incriminating evidence: excess deaths and forced labour under Stalin: a final reply to critics. Economic problems of the Soviet Health Service: 1917-1930. Excess mortality in the Soviet Union: a reconsideration of the demographic consequences of forced industrialization 1929-1949. Forced labour statistics: some comments. Causes of Soviet adult mortality increases.
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