This paper traces the history of attempts to restrict contraception, the legal events securing widespread access to contraception and their importance to a generation of college-aged women, the short-lived nature of the consensus that produced them, and the potential of the issue to serve as a rallying point for a revitalized feminism. It explores the hypocrisy of a system that, whatever its values, makes reproductive autonomy readily available for the affluent and the sophisticated and increasingly beyond the reach of the most vulnerable. Finally, it considers the potential of contraception as a reframing device, capable of exposing the hypocrisy of family values advocates whose policies disproportionately hurt the most vulnerable
An extensive body of research suggests that increasing access to contraception can improve the healt...
This work highlights the stories women weave as they make their contraceptive decisions. It included...
The article describes how the merging of Southern and Northern women's health groups resulted in a p...
The use of and access to contraception in American culture has been a topic of controversy for sever...
Much of the controversy surrounding reproductive rights in the United States is mainly concentrated ...
The vast majority of literature on the use of contraception focuses on its frequently documented con...
Contraception is often a taken-for-granted element of actively heterosexual women’s lives. Yet whil...
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...
In 1873, the Comstock Act labeled contraceptive information and materials obscene and banned their d...
Challenges to federal law requiring insurance coverage of contraception are occurring on the eve of ...
Modern contraceptive technology is more than a technical advance: it has brought about a true social...
The World Health Organization reported that 40% of the pregnancies in the world in 1977 were unplann...
Since the 1960s, the solution to contraception problems has been based increasingly on complexity, n...
For more than 140 years, religious, medical, legislative, and legal institutions have contested the ...
An extensive body of research suggests that increasing access to contraception can improve the healt...
This work highlights the stories women weave as they make their contraceptive decisions. It included...
The article describes how the merging of Southern and Northern women's health groups resulted in a p...
The use of and access to contraception in American culture has been a topic of controversy for sever...
Much of the controversy surrounding reproductive rights in the United States is mainly concentrated ...
The vast majority of literature on the use of contraception focuses on its frequently documented con...
Contraception is often a taken-for-granted element of actively heterosexual women’s lives. Yet whil...
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...
In 1873, the Comstock Act labeled contraceptive information and materials obscene and banned their d...
Challenges to federal law requiring insurance coverage of contraception are occurring on the eve of ...
Modern contraceptive technology is more than a technical advance: it has brought about a true social...
The World Health Organization reported that 40% of the pregnancies in the world in 1977 were unplann...
Since the 1960s, the solution to contraception problems has been based increasingly on complexity, n...
For more than 140 years, religious, medical, legislative, and legal institutions have contested the ...
An extensive body of research suggests that increasing access to contraception can improve the healt...
This work highlights the stories women weave as they make their contraceptive decisions. It included...
The article describes how the merging of Southern and Northern women's health groups resulted in a p...