[Anthropgrad] Pre-Field Seminar by Hang Minh Tran on Friday, 28 Nov 08
Sin Wen Lau
sinwen.lau at anu.edu.au
Mon Nov 24 09:25:48 EST 2008
Anthropology Friday Seminar Series, Semester 2, 2008
Milgate Room, AD Hope Building
Friday, 28 November 2008, 3pm
'New Reproductive Technologies, New Reproductive Trends: Sex Selective
Abortion in Contemporary Northern Vietnam'
Pre-Field Seminar by Hang Minh Tran, Ph.D. Candidate, Department of
Anthropology, RSPAS
Improvements in prenatal diagnosis, in particular the development of
ultrasound scanning technology, have been linked in some contexts to an
increase in sex identification before birth and to sex selective
abortions. Ultrasound is today the most commonly practiced method of sex
selection in several countries in South and East Asia and preliminary
studies suggest that it is becoming increasingly prevalent in Vietnam as
well. There is some evidence that Vietnam’s national sex ratio at birth
is currently skewed toward a higher-than-expected number of boys, a
trend occurring in tandem with the increasing availability of ultrasound
and its promotion as a tool for sex selection. This situation may lead
to significant societal and demographic changes, having potentially
adverse implications for women and for society at large.
This anthropological study aims to understand contemporary forms of
reproductive agency by exploring the experiences of those making use of
new reproductive technologies to determine the sex of their child. The
study’s main objectives are: (1) to document and elucidate the use of
ultrasound scanning for sex selective abortion in Vietnam; (2) to
describe the motives, circumstances and experiences of those seeking to
determine the sex of the fetus and to undergo sex selective abortions;
(3) to examine the social differentiation of “reproductive agents” in
term of kinship, class, occupational or other factors; and (4) to
investigate societal responses to the sex selective abortion phenomenon.
I wish to draw a holistic picture about the motives, methods and
meanings of sex determination and sex selective abortion practices in
the Vietnamese context. I hope to bring a case for the complexity,
diversity, and contradictory nature of the impact of reproductive
technology on the lives and bodies of women in local settings.
Since the research topic implicates complex economic, social, cultural,
political, and gender issues, an interdisciplinary approach will guide
the process of data gathering. Holistic and multilayered ethnography is
the key element of this research design. The core methods include
participant observation in public and private obstetrical clinics, the
development of rapport with individual reproductive agents so as to
track their life circumstances and experiences, and formal and informal
interviews with a diverse range of respondents. Surveys, analysis of
media reports and policy documents, and interviews with regulators and
health professionals will be used to gauge societal responses to this
phenomenon.
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Lau Sin Wen
Department of Anthropology
Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies
The Australian National University
Canberra ACT0200
Australia
Telephone : +61-2-6125-3271
Fax : +61-2-6125-4896
Email : sinwen.lau at anu.edu.au
Website : http://rspas.anu.edu.au/anthropology
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