Enright, MaireadMcNeily, Kathrynde Londras, Fiona2025-11-182025-11-18https://hdl.handle.net/1885/733794125Abortion laws in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland have recently undergone radical reform. This occurred following a 2018 referendum in the Replblic and the passing of the Northern Ireland (Execive Formation etc) Act 2019 in Northern Ireland. In both jurisdictions, these legal changes are the products not only of moments of constitutional and legislative action or of litigation, but of decades of feivnist protest and strategising that both generated and exploited moments of legal opportunity. In this article, drawing on a 2018 workshop and qualitative interviews with feminist activists, we focus attention on what we call the 'feminist law work' involved in reform, highlighting the role of non-lawyer activists in achieving legal change in instrumental, creative, emotional, and laborious ways. lIe argue that 'feminist law work' should be taken seriousy as a highly skilled and indispensable driving force informal legal change processes.This research was supported by research activity grants from Birmingham Law School and Ulster University School of Law, a research activity grant from the SLSA to support transcription (Enright), and the Philip Leverhulme Prize (de Londras, PLP-2017-181).application/pdfen-AU© Queen's University School of LawAbortion Activism, Legal Change, and Taking Feminist Law Work Seriously202010.53386/nilq.v71i3.3172023-10-29