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14. Sustaining Full-Spectrum Sexual and Reproductive Health Care after Dobbs

  • Jennifer Pepper , Wyndi Anderson , Holly Calvasina and Madison Webb
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Fighting Mad
This chapter is in the book Fighting Mad
© 2024 University of California Press, Berkeley

© 2024 University of California Press, Berkeley

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Introduction 1
  4. Part I: Roe Was Never Enough
  5. Introduction 9
  6. 1. Disability, Dobbs, and a Black Perspective 13
  7. 2. Colonization, Resistance, and Indigenous Reproductive Justice 19
  8. 3. Statement from Advisory Council of the Building the Fire Fund regarding Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization 25
  9. 4. Plan C 27
  10. 5. Come Hell or High Water: A Patchwork of Community Care in Appalachia 34
  11. 6. “We Too Have Abortions”: Centering the Abortion Experiences and Needs of Asian Communities 38
  12. 7. How Dobbs Will Deepen the Traumas of Incarcerated Pregnant People 42
  13. Part II: Never-Ending Emergency and Never-Ending Fight
  14. Introduction 49
  15. 8. Performing Abortions after Roe 54
  16. 9. From College Campus to Community: A Physician’s Perspective on Abortion and Contraception Access in Restrictive States 59
  17. 10. What We Inherit: Foster Youth and the Ongoing Eradication of Our Autonomy 65
  18. 11. The Multiple Dangers of Baby Safe Haven Laws 71
  19. 12. Reproductive Justice Has the Blueprint for Post-Roe America, but Are We Ready for It? 76
  20. 13. Krystale E. Littlejohn Interviews Francine Thompson, the Emma Goldman Clinic, Iowa City 81
  21. 14. Sustaining Full-Spectrum Sexual and Reproductive Health Care after Dobbs 89
  22. 15. A Reproductive Justice Activist in Kentucky: Under Attack, Fighting Back! 94
  23. Part III: Strategic Action for Securing Access
  24. Introduction 99
  25. 16. Reproductive Justice and the Fight for Queer Liberation: What the Dobbs Ruling Illuminates 105
  26. 17. Workers’ Role in Defending Abortion Rights 109
  27. 18. Keeping the Faith in Missouri 114
  28. 19. Organizing in Pennsylvania 119
  29. 20. Protecting Abortion in the Heartland 124
  30. 21. A Kansas Prosecutor’s Resistance to the Post-Roe Antiabortion Movement 130
  31. 22. Protecting Abortion in Austin 136
  32. 23. My Journey to Becoming an Abortion Doula 141
  33. 24. Krystale E. Littlejohn Interviews the Founders of Plan C 144
  34. 25. Feminist Art as Feminist Activism: An Anti–Crisis Pregnancy Center Exhibit in the Post-Roe Landscape 151
  35. Part IV: Fighting at the Frontiers of Criminalization
  36. Introduction 161
  37. 26. The Digital Battleground in the Fight for Reproductive Rights 166
  38. 27. Law Enforcement Discretion for Self-Managed Abortion Helpers 175
  39. 28. Preparing Criminal Defense Attorneys to Fight for Reproductive Justice 180
  40. 29. What’s Next for Doctors and Patients: Care, Compassion, and Criminalization in a Post-Roe World 185
  41. 30. Surveilled, Criminalized, and Deportable: The Disproportional Impacts of Dobbs on Immigrants and the Fight against Reproductive Injustice 192
  42. 31. Using Disability and Access Statements to Get Resources to Students in Texas 198
  43. Part V: Protecting Abortion Access in the Face of Fascism
  44. Introduction 207
  45. 32. Let’s Talk about Money and Abortion 212
  46. 33. Pre-Dobbs but Post-Roe: Funding Abortion in Louisiana in Early Pandemic Years 218
  47. 34. We Take Care of Us: Continuing the Fight for Abortion Access in Post-Dobbs Oklahoma 223
  48. 35. Dobbs and Medical Education 228
  49. 36. Repro Legal Defense Fund (at If/When/How) 234
  50. 37. Employer Abortion Travel Benefits Are Important, but They Aren’t Enough 238
  51. 38. Getting People to Abortion Care, Whatever It Takes 242
  52. 39. Jill Filipovic Interviews Rebecca Gomperts 248
  53. Part VI: Resisting Religious Tyranny
  54. Introduction 257
  55. 40. The Dobbs Decision, God, and Moral Conscience 261
  56. 41. Open Letter from Seven Muslim American Organizations 267
  57. 42. The Torah of Abortion Justice 271
  58. 43. What Everyone Gets Wrong about Evangelicals and Abortion 276
  59. 44. Abortion and Faith in Florida 282
  60. Part VII: Envisioning the Future
  61. Introduction 287
  62. 45. Even with Contraception, People Need and Must Have Access to Abortion 292
  63. 46. Building Gender Equity by Engaging Men in Reproductive Responsibility 296
  64. 47. Shifting Abortion Public Opinion: A Case Study in Complexity, Compassion, and the Role of Doctors’ Voices 301
  65. 48. Rejecting the Abortion Debate Binary Is Essential to Moving toward Reproductive Justice 307
  66. 49. Dobbs, Democracy, and Distortion 312
  67. 50. The Power of Discernment 316
  68. 51. A Black Abortion Provider’s Perspective on Post-Roe America 322
  69. 52. Reproductive Justice Futurism: Trust Black Women 325
  70. Notes 333
  71. References 347
  72. About the Editors 350
  73. About the Contributors 351
  74. Index 359
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