Since the passage of Roe v. Wade, the debate over reproductive rights
has dominated America's courts, legislatures, and streets. The
contributors to The Reproductive Rights Reader embrace reproductive
justice for all women, but challenge mainstream legal and political
solutions based on protecting free choice via neutral governmental
policies, which frequently ignore or jeopardize the interests of women
of color and the poor. Instead, the pieces in this interdisciplinary
book--including both legal cases and articles by legal scholars,
historians, sociologists, political scientists and others--favor a
critical analysis that addresses the concrete material conditions that
limit choices, the role of law and social policy in creating those
conditions, and the gendered power dynamics that inform and are
reinforced by the regulation of human reproduction.
The selections demonstrate that the right to choice is not an automatic
guarantee of reproductive justice and gender equality; to truly achieve
this ideal it is essential to recognize the complexity of women's
reproductive experiences and needs. Divided into four sections, the book
examines feminist critiques of medical knowledge and practice; and the
legal regulation of pregnancy termination, conception and child-bearing,
and behavior during pregnancy.