This Article is an edited and expanded version of Rachel Roth’s presentation at the 2016 Western New England Law Review Symposium on Gender and Incarceration. It provides an overview of reproductive justice and describes (1) how prisons and jails undermine reproductive health, rights, and justice for the people they confine, and (2) how mass incarceration undermines the prospect for reproductive justice in the United States overall. It focuses on examples from women’s prisons and includes issues and advocacy work from Massachusetts and across the country
Abolition and reproductive justice go hand and hand. Both incarceration and reproductive oppression ...
This article will explore the growth in the incarceration of women over the past three decades. Rece...
Despite academic, policy and charity commissioned research giving considerable attention to the heal...
This Article is an edited and expanded version of Rachel Roth’s presentation at the 2016 Western New...
The articles in this Symposium edition include four pieces on gender and incarceration. The first by...
honors thesisCollege of HumanitiesHistoryElizabeth ClementThe history of the reproductive rights of ...
Reproductive healthcare is a fundamental aspect of women’s rights. Despite this, there has been no s...
165,000 women are estimated to be incarcerated in the United States. These are disproportionately wo...
With increased attention on and awareness about the rights of incarcerated people, their reproductiv...
In England and Wales, women who are imprisoned are meant to receive the same standard of healthcare ...
The context in which the sterilization of incarcerated women takes place is a deeply coercive one. T...
The context in which the sterilization of incarcerated women takes place is a deeply coercive one. T...
The context in which the sterilization of incarcerated women takes place is a deeply coercive one. T...
A 2013 investigative report on California prisons exposed the recent use of coercive tactics to indu...
Despite academic, policy and charity commissioned research giving considerable attention to the heal...
Abolition and reproductive justice go hand and hand. Both incarceration and reproductive oppression ...
This article will explore the growth in the incarceration of women over the past three decades. Rece...
Despite academic, policy and charity commissioned research giving considerable attention to the heal...
This Article is an edited and expanded version of Rachel Roth’s presentation at the 2016 Western New...
The articles in this Symposium edition include four pieces on gender and incarceration. The first by...
honors thesisCollege of HumanitiesHistoryElizabeth ClementThe history of the reproductive rights of ...
Reproductive healthcare is a fundamental aspect of women’s rights. Despite this, there has been no s...
165,000 women are estimated to be incarcerated in the United States. These are disproportionately wo...
With increased attention on and awareness about the rights of incarcerated people, their reproductiv...
In England and Wales, women who are imprisoned are meant to receive the same standard of healthcare ...
The context in which the sterilization of incarcerated women takes place is a deeply coercive one. T...
The context in which the sterilization of incarcerated women takes place is a deeply coercive one. T...
The context in which the sterilization of incarcerated women takes place is a deeply coercive one. T...
A 2013 investigative report on California prisons exposed the recent use of coercive tactics to indu...
Despite academic, policy and charity commissioned research giving considerable attention to the heal...
Abolition and reproductive justice go hand and hand. Both incarceration and reproductive oppression ...
This article will explore the growth in the incarceration of women over the past three decades. Rece...
Despite academic, policy and charity commissioned research giving considerable attention to the heal...