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The Parenthood Dilemma Gina Rushton
Procreation In The Age Of Uncertainty
NONFICTION | SOCIAL SCIENCE
HARDCOVER
ISBN: 9781662602320
PUB DATE: September 19, 2023
256pp
Price: US $27 / CAN $36
A bold feminist investigation into the mother of all questions; whether or not to become a parent in these turbulent times.
Should we become parents?
This timeless question forces us to reckon with who we are and what we love and fear most in ourselves, in our relationships, and in the world as it is now and as it will be.
When Gina Rushton admitted she had little time left to make the decision for herself, the magnitude of the choice overwhelmed her. Her search for her own “yes” or “no” only uncovered more questions to be answered. How do we clearly consider creating a new life on a planet facing catastrophic climate change? How do we reassess the gender roles we have been assigned at birth and by society? How do we balance ascending careers with declining fertility? How do we know if we’ve found the right co-parent, or if we want to go it alone, or if we don’t want to do it at all?
To seek clarity on these questions, Rushton spoke to doctors, sociologists, economists, and ethicists, as well as parents and childless people of all ages and from around the world. Here, she explores and presents policies, data, and case studies from people who have made this decision—one way or the other—and shows how the process can be revelatory in discovering who we are as individuals.
Drawing on the depth of knowledge afforded by her body of work as an awardwinning journalist on the abortion beat, Rushton wrote the book that she needed, and we all need, to stop a panicked internal monologue and start a genuine dialogue about what we want from our lives and why.
PRAISE FOR The Parenthood Dilemma
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
GINA RUSHTON is a reproductive rights and women’s health reporter and editor whose work has been published in BuzzFeed News The Guardian, Vogue, Associated Press, The Sydney Morning Herald, and The Monthly. This is her first book.

“Gina Rushton interrogates the most personal, political and primal anxieties of our generation, and delivers a clarity so sharp, it borders on pain. But the pain is transformative when shared and given shape, and I read this book feeling nothing short of seen, consoled and grateful.”
—Benjamin Law, author of The Family Law