New Books Network

Maud Anne Bracke, "Reproductive Rights in Modern France: Reproductive Rights in Modern France: Feminism, Contraception, and Abortion, 1950-1980 (Oxford UP, 2025)

Mar 9, 2026
Maud Bracke, Professor of Modern European History at the University of Glasgow and author of Reproductive Rights in Modern France, explores how 1960s-70s reforms tied reproductive liberty to social responsibility. She discusses stratified reproduction, contraception and abortion laws, racialized policies in Guadeloupe and Martinique, disability groups' influence, and the limits of mainstream feminism's universality.
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INSIGHT

Liberalization Masks Stratified Reproductive Governance

  • Celebratory narratives of 1960s–70s liberalization miss stratified reproduction and exclusion.
  • Bracke uses 'stratified reproductive governance' to show how race, class, and disability shaped who actually gained rights.
INSIGHT

Rights Came With Responsibility Requirements

  • Reproductive citizenship in 1960s–70s France paired rights with responsibility, limiting access.
  • Laws and debates (e.g., 1967 contraception law) framed contraception as a right conditional on women proving they could be 'responsible' citizens.
INSIGHT

Pronatalism Produced Targeted Antinatalism

  • Postwar French pronatalism was stratified by class and race, producing targeted antinatalism.
  • INED research and press translated class-fertility correlations into stigmatizing narratives about large working-class families.
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