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Rewinding Roe v. Wade: Understanding the Accelerated Adoption of State-Level Restrictive Abortion Legislation, 2008–2014

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ABSTRACT

Since 2008 the volume of state-level legislation regulating abortion has dramatically increased, with nearly 300 restrictive laws passing in 33 states. While the character of these laws is varied, many have the potential to significantly limit access to abortion for some women. Using a multilevel modeling approach, we investigate a wide variety of state-level factors associated with these developments. We find that a larger number of antiabortion policies have passed in states under full Republican control, with fewer female Democratic legislators, and states with a stronger presence by the conservative Evangelical movement within state governments. We also examine more substantive restrictions on clinics, abortion seekers, and funding in a separate analysis, and symbolic restrictions and those intended to discourage women seeking abortions in another. Most of the variation in both types of restrictions is explained by GOP control and conservative Evangelical movement influence. One noteworthy difference, however, is that the presence of more female Democratic legislators is associated with reductions in the passage of the more symbolic types of restrictions, but not more substantial and consequential restrictions. Following the expectations of the political mediation model, we test whether the impacts of multiple factors are contingent upon the presence of full GOP control of state governments. We find that GOP legislative majorities passed substantially more antiabortion legislation in the context of states with majorities of pro-life legislators, more female Republican legislators, more pro-life nonprofits per capita, and stronger conservative Evangelical movement influence in state governments. Overall, we view these policy developments as a product of the convergence of decades of investment by the conservative Evangelical antiabortion movement into GOP institutions with the political opportunities provided by unusually high levels of state-level Republican party control following the 2010 elections.

Supplementary data

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.1080/1554477X.2018.1511123

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Keith Gunnar Bentele

Keith Gunnar Bentele is an associate professor of sociology at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Much of his research examines the factors shaping policy outcomes in US state legislatures. His recent research has examined the passage of state level voter restrictions and multiple types of state legislation sought by the conservative Evangelical movement (e.g. faith-based initiatives). In addition, Bentele has examined the drivers of rising earnings inequality, poverty, and variation in welfare state generosity across states. He currently working on research examining the contributions of racial wealth inequality to racial differences in housing vulnerability.

Rebecca Sager

Rebecca Sager is currently an associate professor of sociology at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles and a research fellow at Center for the Study of Religion and Civic Culture at the University of Southern California. Her book Faith, Politics and Power (Oxford 2010), examines the role of conservative evangelical movements in state implementation of faith-based initiatives. Professor Sager has published a number of papers in academic journals on church and state separation, religion, politics, and social services, and is currently working on several research projects including a new project examining how the Trump administration is implanting religiously conservative policies.

Amanda Aykanian

Amanda Aykanian, MA is a doctoral candidate in the School of Social Welfare at the University at Albany, State University of New York and the Research and Project Lead for the National Center for Excellence in Homeless Services. Her work has been published in Social Work, Families in Society, and the Journal of Children and Poverty. Her current research focuses on provider experiences working with highly mobile homeless youth, and she is currently co-editing a social work textbook on homelessness.
 

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