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In the United States, abortion is a highly polarizing issue:

  • We have political organizations with substantial influence on the major parties,
  • it is a regular topic of debate amongst candidates (less so now than in the past, but it was still the focus of many ads in the last Presidential election), and
  • it generally is a "top-of-mind" issue for many voters, at least when measured by polls that ask voters to list important issues to them.

Outside of the United States, I'm aware that it is an issue - particularly in Catholic countries - but I'm not really clear on how important it is to voters. How would one characterize the level of debate in:

  • Catholic Europe
  • South America
  • Non-Catholic Europe
  • South Asia (India, etc..)
  • Muslim areas
  • and the rest of Africa?
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    At least in Europe, a lot of people would probably ask in return "how many months pregnant?". The numbers of people who support abortion in the first trimester is going to be very different from who supports adoption in the second trimester.
    – Sklivvz
    Commented Jan 8, 2013 at 23:50
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    There are ongoing efforts by US evangelical groups to export the issue to countries where it was thought settled.
    – pjc50
    Commented Mar 1, 2019 at 13:08

5 Answers 5

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In very general terms, abortion is not a "top of the mind" issue for voters in Europe. It's certainly a contentious social issue, as is everywhere, and different countries follow different approaches, but other than very specific examples it's not a frontline issue in European politics.

I might be stating the obvious here, but abortion laws are not uniform in Europe or the European Union. That said, with the exception of Ireland and Malta, you can assume a "available on request" approach with a minimum gestational limit of 12 weeks in the EU and most non EU countries, that is (broadly) similar to the US approach. BBC News has a very interesting map of Europe's abortion laws that gives a quick overview of related national regulations as of 2007:

While the above map might show a somewhat uniform approach, at least in the core countries of the EU, it doesn't really say much about the population's social acceptance of abortion, other than the fact that at some point in the past it was high enough for regulators to legalize the practice.

Havas Worldwide (then Euro RSCG) commissioned a study on "European values" in 2005 that included the question:

If a woman doesn't want children, she should be able to have an abortion

The results of the study showed varying support for abortion, with the exception of Poland1, the only country where the (slim) majority answered "total no":

This is just one study, but it includes the more populous countries and shows that public opinion is more or less on par with established policies and regulations.

Ireland is the notable exception when it comes to abortion and politics, the Eight Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland (7 October 1983) introduced a constitutional prohibition of abortion:

The State acknowledges the right to life of the unborn and, with due regard to the equal right to life of the mother, guarantees in its laws to respect, and, as far as practicable, by its laws to defend and vindicate that right.

The ban was loosened up a bit by the Thirteenth and the Fourteenth Amendments, however the issue remains controversial in Ireland.

In December 2010, the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) found that Ireland had failed to comply with the European Convention on Human Rights Act in the Case of A, B, and C v. Ireland, while at the same time recognizing that Ireland was free to have whatever abortion laws it wants, provided they are clear, effective and accessible. Prior to the ruling, A, B, and C v. Ireland was quoted as a potential European equivalent to Roe v. Wade, but the ECtHR emphasized that the European Convention on Human Rights Act does not provide a straightforward right to abortion.

Unfortunately, the lack of clarity on Ireland's abortion regulations identified by the ECtHR was put to the test in October 2012, with tragic results:

Savita Halappanavar, who was 17 weeks pregnant, died of septicaemia a week after presenting with back pain on 21 October at University hospital in Galway, where she was found to be miscarrying.

After the 31-year-old dentist was told that she was miscarrying, her husband reportedly said that she had asked for a medical termination a number of times over a three day period, during which she was in severe pain.

But he said these requests were denied because a foetal heartbeat was still present and they were told at one point: "This is a Catholic country."

Ms. Halappanavar's death re-started the abortion debate in Ireland, and to a lesser extend in Europe, and currently the majority opinion seems to be in favour of drastic reforms in the country's abortion policies that would bring Ireland closer to the rest of Europe when it comes to women's access to abortion.

In conclusion and returning to your core question, I can't imagine the issue becoming as divisive as in the US even if public opinion was largely against abortions, at least not in the near future. I tried to get a better feeling of the state of the debate in the US, and I was both horrified and surprised when I stumbled upon the anti-abortion violence article on Wikipedia. If this is the level of tension you had in mind, then no, Europe is nowhere near that level of craziness when it comes to issues with religious overtones.

1 I'll venture a guess and say that Poles at the time were more open to the Catholic Church's view on the issue, given that the then Pope, John Paul II, was Polish.

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    It's worth noting that Ms. Halappanavar is not Catholic.
    – user171
    Commented Jan 9, 2013 at 15:28
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    It's worth pointing out that, contrary to much reporting in the US, University Hospital Galway is not a Catholic hospital, ie one owned by the Catholic church. Commented Jan 12, 2013 at 17:20
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    European countries that have abortion-on-demand legalized it through their parliaments, so it's expected that the laws would reflect public opinion. The US, however, had democratically-passed abortion restrictions struck down by an activist Supreme Court, with tenuous constitutional justification. This galvanized the opposition.
    – dan04
    Commented Jul 14, 2013 at 5:32
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    I've added a note that the map is current as of 2007. Readers should further be aware that this answer is by now 9 years old, and that the situation has changed in several European countries, either towards becoming more liberal (Ireland) or more restrictive (Poland).
    – gerrit
    Commented Apr 21, 2022 at 7:31
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    Poland should be yellow on the map, as of now. They rather let the mother die than have an abortion. Commented Apr 21, 2022 at 9:31
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Having lived in New Zealand, the debate is much different there, as it is in Australia, and much of Western Europe.

Varying forms of Universal Healthcare exist, from Switzerland's health insurance system, to a more public system like the UK NHS. To make some brief examples.

Obtaining an abortion is usually dependent on seeing a doctor, and getting their approval for the procedure, based on whether it is medically safe. There is a time period set by the government, after which point, you can't have an abortion (unless having the child poses a health risk to the mother), and if you don't want the child after birth it goes into state care.

So when I say that the debate is different, it is often related to having public hospitals, and non-religious institution based healthcare, and the time limit in which you can get an abortion. While there may be a religious fringe, the focus of most religious organizations would be on convincing people to not go through with an abortion, or on reducing the time in which someone can get one.

Contrast this with the US, where the debate is not only a heavy focus on the time limit, but also on access to abortion itself, with many politicians seeking to enact, or enacting laws and measures that limit the number of abortion clinics, and restrict abortion to instances of rape or health risk to the mother.

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If recent protests in South America are an indication, then abortion is still a charged political issue there.

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"I oppose abortion in all cases" is as fringe a belief in Australia as "Lizard people control politics" is in the USA.

Australia has a pro-choice majority of 61% (without question) + 26% (conditional)) = 87% for, and 4% totally opposed in all cases. The conflict is 87% vs 4%.

The conflict is much more lop sided than America (29% (without question) + 50% (conditional) = 79% vs 20% totally opposed in all cases.

The percentage of Australians who are totally opposed to all abortion (4%) is equal to the percentage of Americans who believe Lizard people rule the country

The anti-abortion crowd is in such the minority and such a fringe belief that you can assume an average person is at least partially pro-choice.

But this doesn't mean the conflict isn't divisive:

In Australia; I've witnessed conflict between anti- and pro-choice protesters (like this one), I've witnessed people ostracized from their religious community after having an abortion. I've had people come up to me on the street with confronting images in a vain hope to make me anti-choice. Australia has needed to add several "safe zone" laws preventing anti-choice activists from accosting clients and staff in transit to abortion clinics.

A catholic youth group I joined in my church as a 17 year old had "go picket abortion clinics" as an example of how we should put our faith into action. We didn't do that part as we agreed it wasn't part of our beliefs.

My state has the most restrictive laws on the books in Australia: 2 doctors need to sign saying it is needed for the health of the mother or for serious handicaps, however I know of no-one who has been unable to get an abortion on demand. "I don't want a kid" is routinely stretched to "mental health issues of mother" to give accessible abortion regardless of the text of the law.

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A lot of people seem to think that "outside of the US" means Europe, even though OP requested answers for much of the rest of the world beyond just the US and Europe.

In Brazil, which makes up the majority of South America's population, abortion in completely illegal in all states unless the life of the mother is at risk as a result of the pregnancy or if the pregnancy is a result of rape. Both left of center and right wing governments have left the issue untouched, as in Brazil, a good majority of people are "prolife" or antiabortion. As early as 2017, Ipsos, a polling data firm, found 87% of Brazilians to be against the legalization of abortion. Ditto decriminalization.

https://www.estudosnacionais.com/4743/rejeicao-ao-aborto-no-brasil-cresce-para-87-mostra-pesquisa/

Despite this fact, there are several prominent groups that fight for women's reproductive rights and have been able to bring the issue to the forefront of Brazilian politics. Current President of Brazil, Jair Bolsonaro, has no intentions on changing Brazilian law to make abortion legal beyond the situations stated above.

Maybe others can answer for different parts of the world that aren't Europe.

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