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Title: Dubious conceptions: the politics of teenage pregnancy.
Author: Luker K
Source: Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1996. [7], 283 p.
Abstract: This book on teenage pregnancy in the US opens by introducing the reader to David, the toddler son of an unmarried, White, teenage mother. The situation in which David and his mother Michelle find themselves is used to paint a human face on the problem of teenage pregnancy. This chapter also introduces the themes that will be developed in the remainder of the book and notes that teenagers get pregnant and continue their pregnancies because adult conventional wisdom fails to coincide with the demographic, socioeconomic, and sexual reality of their world. Chapter 2 provides an historical context for this discussion by exploring the themes of bastardy, fitness for procreation (age, marital status, mental health, and education/income levels), and the invention of adolescence. Chapter 3 considers the issues of poverty, fertility, and the state through a look at 19th-century bans on contraception and abortion, the "war on poverty" of the 1960s, the increase in numbers of teenagers at risk of unwanted pregnancy during the 1970s, arguments surrounding the provision of contraception to teenagers, the official emergence of adolescent pregnancy as a social problem in 1975, and the conservative reaction. Chapter 4 deals with the myths created to construct the perception of an adolescent pregnancy epidemic. Chapter 5 covers the topics of who becomes a teenage mother; the consequences of teenage pregnancy on health, education, and economic well-being; and how the children of these mothers fare. The question of why approximately 1 million US teenagers get pregnant and half a million have babies each year is explored in the next chapter by contrasting dreams and realities; tracing the path to pregnancy; and exploring the options of abortion, marriage, and adoption. The final chapter considers public policies that could reduce the incidence of adolescent pregnancy and help young mothers move out of the cycle of poverty.
Language: English

Keywords:
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA | CRITIQUE | LITERATURE REVIEW | QUALITATIVE EVALUATION | ADOLESCENTS | ADOLESCENT PREGNANCY | POLITICAL FACTORS | ILLEGITIMACY | POVERTY | DECISION MAKING | ABORTION | ADOPTION | North America | Americas | Developed Countries | Evaluation | Youth | Age Factors | Population Characteristics | Demographic Factors | Population | Reproductive Behavior | Fertility | Population Dynamics | Social Problems | Socioeconomic Factors | Economic Factors | Behavior | Fertility Control, Postconception | Family Planning | Child Rearing
Document Number: 119863   Notification
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