’This book is essential reading for anyone interested in abortion politics. It not only charts the extraordinary twists and turns in abortion politics in Ireland since the 1980s but also develops a sophisticated analysis of the links between women's reproductive rights and the construction of nations and national identities. The author argues convincingly that discourses of nationhood are sexualised and gendered. Not to be missed.’ Professor Nickie Charles, University of Warwick, UK ’In her thoughtful qualitative analysis of newspaper and parliamentary discourses, Smyth highlights the way abortion law is a symbolic political statement about national identity...[her] approach to gender and national identity lends itself well to replication across a variety of issues, from the moral panic over gay marriage in the US to headscarf debates in Europe.’ Contemporary Sociology ’Smyth’s dispassionate examination of...developments provides a model of clear thinking and writing...An important case study of the new politics of fetal rights...will provide an excellent resource for research, classroom, and political use.’ Population and Development Review 'Abortion and Nation analyzes the ways in which abortion politics have been framed and reframed in Ireland over the past two decades...this work makes a vluable contribution to the existing body of material on abortion in Ireland and will engage readers interested in abortion, politics, sociology or cultural studies.' Journal of the Association for research on Mothering