Fertility regulation as identity maintenance: Understanding the social aspects of birth control
Document Type
Article (peer-reviewed)
Publication Date
2018
Abstract
We take a dialogical approach to exploring fertility regulation practices and show how they can maintain or express social identity. We identify three themes in educated Ghanaian women’s accounts of how they navigate conflicting social demands on their identity when trying to regulate fertility: secrecy and silence—hiding contraception use and avoiding talking about it; tolerating uncertainty—such as using unreliable but more socially acceptable contraception; and wanting to be fertile and protecting menses. Family planning programmes that fail to tackle such social-psychological obstacles to regulating fertility will risk reproducing social spaces where women struggle to claim their reproductive rights.
Recommended Citation
Marston, Cicely, Alicia Renedo, and Gertrude Nyaaba. 2018. "Fertility regulation as identity maintenance: Understanding the social aspects of birth control," Journal of Health Psychology 23(2): 240–251.
DOI
10.1177/1359105317726367
Language
English
Project
Strengthening Evidence for Programming on Unintended Pregnancy (STEP UP)