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Gender & Society, Vol. 16, No. 5, 647-664 (2002)
DOI: 10.1177/089124302236990

Economic Security and the Social Science Literature on Teenage Pregnancy in South Africa

CATRIONA MACLEOD

Rhodes University, South Africa c.macleod{at}ru.ac.za

Feminists have argued that the association made between teenage childbearing and long-term lower socioeconomic status hides a multitude of socially constructed inequalities. I extend this position by analyzing how the association is linked in the South African literature on teenage pregnancy to economic security. I utilize Foucault's conceptualization of the method of security. Security refers to institutions and practices that defend and maintain a national population as well as secure the economic, demographic, and social processes of that population. I analyze how the traits of the method of security are deployed with regard to teenage pregnancy; how reproductive adolescents are viewed as disrupting the production of the economic self and fracturing population control, thereby threatening economic security; and how the invocation of economic security allows for the legitimation of various regulatory practices.


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