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Amy Benfer of [[Salon.com]] wrote in 2010 that, according to figures released by the [[Centers for Disease Control and Prevention]], pregnancy rates for all teenagers dropped 2 percent between 2007 and 2008, meaning that "the slight uptick in teen pregnancy rates between 2005 and 2006 were probably just an anomaly and not some heinous trend brought about by pop culture", and that if there had been such a thing as a "Juno effect", it would have caused pregnancies to go down, not up. She criticized proponents of the theory, stating that they believed that teenagers "somehow lose all ability to evaluate any nuance or context in that woman's particular situation, and instead make some sort of primitive cause-and-effect connection" and that "by talking about pregnant girls, and most of all, by daring to portray some of them as ordinary, even likable, we'd get way more babies having babies." She concluded that "depicting teen parents may not ''glamorize'' them, so much as ''humanize'' them. You know, that thing that happens when one person recognizes that someone else is a person too? So, now that we can firmly state that realistically depicting the lives of the tiny percentage of girls who do become pregnant won't necessarily contaminate the rest of them, it's time to stop worrying and ask what we can do to help."<ref name="Salon">{{cite news |first=Amy |last=Benfer |title=Death to 'the "Juno" effect' |url=http://www.salon.com/life/broadsheet/2010/04/09/end_of_the_juno_effect/index.html |work=Salon |date=April 9, 2010 |access-date=March 26, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110204060508/http://www.salon.com/life/broadsheet/2010/04/09/end_of_the_juno_effect/index.html |archive-date=February 4, 2011}}</ref>
 
In light of [[Georgia House Bill 481|Georgia's anti-abortion law]], Diablo Cody said in 2019 she would not have written ''Juno'' now that people perceive it as an "anti-choice" film.<ref>{{cite news |last=Fang |first=Marina |url=https://www.huffpost.com/entry/diablo-cody-juno-abortion_n_5cdd9ab6e4b09648227cc2e2 |title=Diablo Cody Says She Wouldn't Have Written 'Juno' In Today's 'Hellish Alternate Reality' |work=The Huffington Post |date=2019-05-16 |access-date=2019-05-31}}</ref> In 2022, she said, "Back in 2008, I got a letter from some administrator at my Catholic high school thanking me for writing a movie that was in line with the school’s values. And I was like: 'What have I done?' My objective as an artist is to be a traitor to that culture, not to uplift it," but also, "I have no regrets about writing the movie. I do think it’s important that I continue to clarify my feelings about it because the last thing I would ever want is for someone to interpret the movie as anti-choice. That is a huge paranoia of mine. I’ve never really thought about revisiting the film — it kind of feels like something that should stay preserved in amber. But I would rather have this account be out there than [my] silence being misinterpreted" (square brackets in original).<ref>{{cite web |last1=Brown |first1=Evan Nicole |title=Diablo Cody Meditates on 'Juno' and Its Critics 15 Years Later: 'I Am Emphatically Pro-Choice' |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/juno-movie-15-years-later-diablo-cody-roe-1235178240/ |website=The Hollywood Reporter |publisher=The Hollywood Reporter |access-date=22 April 2023 |date=15 July 2022}}</ref>
 
===Top ten lists===
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| {{draw|7th Place}}
|-
| rowspan="6"| [[Alliance of Women Film Journalists]]<ref>{{cite web |title=2007 EDA Awards Nominees Announced |url=http://awfj.org/blog/2007/12/11/nominations-for-2007-eda-awards/ |website=AWJF.org |date=December 11, 2007 |access-date=25 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=2007 EDA Awards |url=http://awfj.org/eda-awards-2/awfjs-2008-eda-awards/ |website=AWJF.org |access-date=25 July 2017}}</ref>
| Best Actress
| rowspan="2"| Elliot Page{{efn|name=Elliot}}
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| {{Runner-up}}
|-
| rowspan="4"| [[Chicago Film Critics Association Awards 2007|Chicago Film Critics Association Awards]]<ref>{{cite web |url=https://chicagofilmcritics.org/awards-blog/archives |title=1988-2013 Award Winner Archives |website=[[Chicago Film Critics Association]] |date=January 2013 |access-date=August 24, 2021}}</ref>
| [[Chicago Film Critics Association Award for Best Director|Best Director]]
| Jason Reitman