Presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Rutgers University Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
About the Author
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Commonly Used Acronyms xi
-
Part I. Introductions: The Stories We Tell and Why
- 1. Introducing Our Relatives and Introducing the Story 1
- 2. Stories from Indian Country 11
- 3. Whose Rights? Whose Justice?: Reproductive Oppression, Reproductive Justice, and the Reproductive Body 26
-
Part II. Tracing the Ruling Relations: Health Care, the Reproductive Body, and Native America
- 4. The Ruling Relations of Reproductive Health Care 39
- 5. Producing the Double Discourse: The History and Politics of Native-US Relations and Imperialist Medicine 51
- 6. “To Uphold the Federal Government’s Obligations . . . and to Honor and Protect”: The Double Discourse of the Indian Health Service 68
-
Part III. Consequences of the Double Discourse: Native Women’s Experiences with the Indian Health Service
- 7. Resistance and Accommodation: Negotiating Prenatal Care and Childbirth 91
- 8. One in Three: Violence against Native Women 105
- 9. Genocidal Consequences: Contraception, Sterilization, and Abortion in the Fourth-World Context 119
-
Part IV. Reproductive Justice for Native Women
- 10. Community Knowledge, Community Capital, and Cultural Safety 137
- 11. Conclusions: Native Women in the Center 152
- Appendix A: Methods and Methodologies 159
- Appendix B: A Brief Chronology of Federal Actions 171
- References 175
- Index 193
- About the Author 201
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Commonly Used Acronyms xi
-
Part I. Introductions: The Stories We Tell and Why
- 1. Introducing Our Relatives and Introducing the Story 1
- 2. Stories from Indian Country 11
- 3. Whose Rights? Whose Justice?: Reproductive Oppression, Reproductive Justice, and the Reproductive Body 26
-
Part II. Tracing the Ruling Relations: Health Care, the Reproductive Body, and Native America
- 4. The Ruling Relations of Reproductive Health Care 39
- 5. Producing the Double Discourse: The History and Politics of Native-US Relations and Imperialist Medicine 51
- 6. “To Uphold the Federal Government’s Obligations . . . and to Honor and Protect”: The Double Discourse of the Indian Health Service 68
-
Part III. Consequences of the Double Discourse: Native Women’s Experiences with the Indian Health Service
- 7. Resistance and Accommodation: Negotiating Prenatal Care and Childbirth 91
- 8. One in Three: Violence against Native Women 105
- 9. Genocidal Consequences: Contraception, Sterilization, and Abortion in the Fourth-World Context 119
-
Part IV. Reproductive Justice for Native Women
- 10. Community Knowledge, Community Capital, and Cultural Safety 137
- 11. Conclusions: Native Women in the Center 152
- Appendix A: Methods and Methodologies 159
- Appendix B: A Brief Chronology of Federal Actions 171
- References 175
- Index 193
- About the Author 201