International audienceChanges in care for perinatal deaths at hospitals since the 1990s have led to a redefinition of support systems for parturient women having had a late-stage miscarriage, a therapeutic abortion or a foetal death after 15 weeks of amenorrhea. In all these cases, the women give birth, are required to declare a “lifeless child” in the civil register, give the child a name, and organise its funeral. These medical and administrative procedures are often presented as providing support for perinatal bereavement. But in reality, they generate new norms that may lead the woman giving birth and her partner to refer to themselves as “parents” of a “deceased child”. Drawing on an interview-based study, this article shows that in ad...