The social movement for reproductive justice: Emergence,intersectional strategies,and theory building |
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Authors: | Meghan Daniel |
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Affiliation: | University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA |
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Abstract: | This article reviews the literature on the reproductive justice social movement and provides an overview of its main theorical and empirical foundations and contributions. It begins by tracing the emergence of reproductive justice, grounding it in longstanding histories of resistance and Black feminist theorizing. It highlights intersectionality as a social movement strategy and tactic embraced by reproductive justice activists, and highlights reproductive justice organizing and scholarship that contributes to our theoretical understandings of the racial politics of reproduction and abolition. In so doing, this piece makes two interrelated contributions. First, it argues reproductive justice generates material and theoretical contributions beyond the scope of what is possible for reproductive health and rights frameworks. Second, it demonstrates that bringing reproductive justice into the focus of sociological inquiry is important for advancing social science scholarship. |
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Keywords: | feminisms gender human rights intersectionality race reproductive justice social movements |
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