Reading for refusal in UK maternity care: entangling struggles for border and reproductive justice

Research has shown that women with insecure immigration statuses in the United Kingdom (UK) are more likely to register later in their pregnancy with National Health Service (NHS) maternity care providers. This late engagement with healthcare services is framed in academic debates as one of the key...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kathryn Cassidy, Rana Amiri, Gill Davidson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 2023-12-01
Series:Fennia: International Journal of Geography
Online Access:https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/127866
_version_ 1797387054954315776
author Kathryn Cassidy
Rana Amiri
Gill Davidson
author_facet Kathryn Cassidy
Rana Amiri
Gill Davidson
author_sort Kathryn Cassidy
collection DOAJ
description Research has shown that women with insecure immigration statuses in the United Kingdom (UK) are more likely to register later in their pregnancy with National Health Service (NHS) maternity care providers. This late engagement with healthcare services is framed in academic debates as one of the key reasons for poor outcomes for these women and their children during and after birth. Interventions, therefore, have focused on how to remove barriers to accessing maternity care for these women. In this paper, we argue that this approach fails to account for the agency of the women adequately, which needs to be understood in the context of state harms and violence towards women with insecure immigration statuses and, in particular, their reproductive lives. We seek to shift these debates by framing this lack of early engagement with state-provided maternity services as a form of refusal that denotes an active disengagement by bordered women from intersecting structures of harm and oppression that are embedded in the UK’s National Health Service, particularly through the charging regime. We argue that the politics of refusal in this case are embedded in struggles not only for border but also reproductive justice. Drawing on participant observation and data from secondary sources, we illustrate how refusal of early antenatal care opens pathways for bordered women to seek the care-ful conditions they need and want during pregnancy.
first_indexed 2024-03-08T22:18:17Z
format Article
id doaj.art-5bff5ad1950d4481b30ff1c1f2bf3058
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1798-5617
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-08T22:18:17Z
publishDate 2023-12-01
publisher Geographical Society of Finland
record_format Article
series Fennia: International Journal of Geography
spelling doaj.art-5bff5ad1950d4481b30ff1c1f2bf30582023-12-18T16:21:34ZengGeographical Society of FinlandFennia: International Journal of Geography1798-56172023-12-01201210.11143/fennia.127866Reading for refusal in UK maternity care: entangling struggles for border and reproductive justiceKathryn Cassidy0Rana Amiri1Gill Davidson2Northumbria UniversityUniversity of SunderlandNorthumbria University Research has shown that women with insecure immigration statuses in the United Kingdom (UK) are more likely to register later in their pregnancy with National Health Service (NHS) maternity care providers. This late engagement with healthcare services is framed in academic debates as one of the key reasons for poor outcomes for these women and their children during and after birth. Interventions, therefore, have focused on how to remove barriers to accessing maternity care for these women. In this paper, we argue that this approach fails to account for the agency of the women adequately, which needs to be understood in the context of state harms and violence towards women with insecure immigration statuses and, in particular, their reproductive lives. We seek to shift these debates by framing this lack of early engagement with state-provided maternity services as a form of refusal that denotes an active disengagement by bordered women from intersecting structures of harm and oppression that are embedded in the UK’s National Health Service, particularly through the charging regime. We argue that the politics of refusal in this case are embedded in struggles not only for border but also reproductive justice. Drawing on participant observation and data from secondary sources, we illustrate how refusal of early antenatal care opens pathways for bordered women to seek the care-ful conditions they need and want during pregnancy. https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/127866
spellingShingle Kathryn Cassidy
Rana Amiri
Gill Davidson
Reading for refusal in UK maternity care: entangling struggles for border and reproductive justice
Fennia: International Journal of Geography
title Reading for refusal in UK maternity care: entangling struggles for border and reproductive justice
title_full Reading for refusal in UK maternity care: entangling struggles for border and reproductive justice
title_fullStr Reading for refusal in UK maternity care: entangling struggles for border and reproductive justice
title_full_unstemmed Reading for refusal in UK maternity care: entangling struggles for border and reproductive justice
title_short Reading for refusal in UK maternity care: entangling struggles for border and reproductive justice
title_sort reading for refusal in uk maternity care entangling struggles for border and reproductive justice
url https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/127866
work_keys_str_mv AT kathryncassidy readingforrefusalinukmaternitycareentanglingstrugglesforborderandreproductivejustice
AT ranaamiri readingforrefusalinukmaternitycareentanglingstrugglesforborderandreproductivejustice
AT gilldavidson readingforrefusalinukmaternitycareentanglingstrugglesforborderandreproductivejustice