For more than three decades, American prosecutors have been bringing criminal prosecutions against pregnant women based on their use of drugs while pregnant, with charges ranging from child abuse or neglect to murder. Almost all of these women are poor, and the vast majority are also women of color--many with histories of childhood sexual or physical abuse and mental disability. In all but three states-Alabama, Kentucky, and South Carolina--such prosecutions have been declared unconstitutional or the resulting convictions have been overturned. Nonetheless, prosecutions continue to be brought, in what can only be described as a crusade against pregnant women in the name of fetal protection. This Article seeks to answer two questions raised b...
In family courts throughout the country, civil neglect and abuse petitions are routinely brought aga...
Legal, medical, and social regulation of pregnant women has been an understudied topic in sociology ...
If a woman is fourteen times more likely to die during pregnancy and childbirth than terminating a p...
For more than three decades, American prosecutors have been bringing criminal prosecutions against p...
Across the United States, and especially in communities that are highly policed and in places hostil...
In this Article the author will examine not only the substantive legal differences between the Unite...
This article addresses the attempts to use criminal punishment to respond to pregnant women who take...
The state of Tennessee arrested a woman two days after she gave birth and charged her with assault o...
This article addresses the attempts to use criminal punishment to respond to pregnant women who take...
This note examines the constitutional and policy implications of criminal prosecutions for prenatal ...
The latest casualties in the war on drugs are pregnant, chemically dependent women, who are viewed a...
Fetal homicide laws, though initially created to protect both mothers and fetuses, serve to wholly p...
This paper briefly examines the actions by states that criminalize substance use during pregnancy th...
In 2013, Pregnancy Justice published the first comprehensive national documentation effort capturing...
In my dissertation I conduct an inquiry into the legal phenomenon of pregnancy-specific crime. I dis...
In family courts throughout the country, civil neglect and abuse petitions are routinely brought aga...
Legal, medical, and social regulation of pregnant women has been an understudied topic in sociology ...
If a woman is fourteen times more likely to die during pregnancy and childbirth than terminating a p...
For more than three decades, American prosecutors have been bringing criminal prosecutions against p...
Across the United States, and especially in communities that are highly policed and in places hostil...
In this Article the author will examine not only the substantive legal differences between the Unite...
This article addresses the attempts to use criminal punishment to respond to pregnant women who take...
The state of Tennessee arrested a woman two days after she gave birth and charged her with assault o...
This article addresses the attempts to use criminal punishment to respond to pregnant women who take...
This note examines the constitutional and policy implications of criminal prosecutions for prenatal ...
The latest casualties in the war on drugs are pregnant, chemically dependent women, who are viewed a...
Fetal homicide laws, though initially created to protect both mothers and fetuses, serve to wholly p...
This paper briefly examines the actions by states that criminalize substance use during pregnancy th...
In 2013, Pregnancy Justice published the first comprehensive national documentation effort capturing...
In my dissertation I conduct an inquiry into the legal phenomenon of pregnancy-specific crime. I dis...
In family courts throughout the country, civil neglect and abuse petitions are routinely brought aga...
Legal, medical, and social regulation of pregnant women has been an understudied topic in sociology ...
If a woman is fourteen times more likely to die during pregnancy and childbirth than terminating a p...