In 1873, the Comstock Act labeled contraceptive information and materials obscene and banned their distribution. The issue divided the United States then, and it divides the nation today. This essay examines 2000–2013 press coverage of contraception in the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times, two newspapers that have covered contraception since 1873. Press coverage reveals that contemporary efforts to regulate women’s bodies are cloaked in discussions about the Affordable Care Act, religious freedom, morality, and employer rights. Accepting the ideology that contraception is no longer a reproductive rights issue allowed the press to exclude women from the debate. In doing so, the power of political, social, and religious groups to cont...
The history of the birth control movement in the United States is traditionally told through account...
This paper seeks to outline the legislative and judicial history of the Affordable Care Act’s contra...
This dissertation returns to an era when the American Medical Association did not consider contracep...
For more than 140 years, religious, medical, legislative, and legal institutions have contested the ...
This study examines the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times press coverage of contraception dur...
This study examines the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times press coverage of contraception dur...
In this article, Hannah Anderson gives an overview of the Obama administration\u27s contraception ma...
This Article examines the use by anti-contraception advocates of the claims that “contraception harm...
This Article examines the use by anti-contraception advocates of the claims that “contraception harm...
This paper examines the recent judicial, administrative, and federal and state legislative efforts t...
Much of the controversy surrounding reproductive rights in the United States is mainly concentrated ...
This paper traces the history of attempts to restrict contraception, the legal events securing wides...
This dissertation returns to an era when the American Medical Association did not consider contracep...
This paper seeks to outline the legislative and judicial history of the Affordable Care Act’s contra...
This paper seeks to outline the legislative and judicial history of the Affordable Care Act’s contra...
The history of the birth control movement in the United States is traditionally told through account...
This paper seeks to outline the legislative and judicial history of the Affordable Care Act’s contra...
This dissertation returns to an era when the American Medical Association did not consider contracep...
For more than 140 years, religious, medical, legislative, and legal institutions have contested the ...
This study examines the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times press coverage of contraception dur...
This study examines the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times press coverage of contraception dur...
In this article, Hannah Anderson gives an overview of the Obama administration\u27s contraception ma...
This Article examines the use by anti-contraception advocates of the claims that “contraception harm...
This Article examines the use by anti-contraception advocates of the claims that “contraception harm...
This paper examines the recent judicial, administrative, and federal and state legislative efforts t...
Much of the controversy surrounding reproductive rights in the United States is mainly concentrated ...
This paper traces the history of attempts to restrict contraception, the legal events securing wides...
This dissertation returns to an era when the American Medical Association did not consider contracep...
This paper seeks to outline the legislative and judicial history of the Affordable Care Act’s contra...
This paper seeks to outline the legislative and judicial history of the Affordable Care Act’s contra...
The history of the birth control movement in the United States is traditionally told through account...
This paper seeks to outline the legislative and judicial history of the Affordable Care Act’s contra...
This dissertation returns to an era when the American Medical Association did not consider contracep...