Rebecca Jordan-Young,
"Introduction"
(page 3 of 6)
The threat of fines, loss of license, and imprisonment for doctors
conveys the (erroneous) impression that most abortions are coerced, and
the laws may well deter even more doctors from providing abortion. But
the main targets of these laws, ironically, are women of color. As
Sujatha Jesudason points out in this issue, "Leveraging a collective
sense of shame, unease, and outrage over 'missing girls' and racist
eugenics, this legislation and campaign is emerging as the latest tactic
of the anti-abortion movement to regulate the reproductive lives of
women of color and limit access to abortion for all women." The same
week the Arizona law was passed, a billboard campaign was unveiled,
beginning in Chicago, President Obama's hometown. The billboard
features Obama's likeness, and reads: "Every 21 minutes our next
possible leader is aborted."[9]
When I read the Chicago Tribune article
online, there was a large ad in the middle of the page that read
"Millions of Babies Killed on Your Dime. Defund Planned Parenthood." The
ad is linked to a petition in support of a major push by anti-choice
legislators in Congress to strip Planned Parenthood of all federal
funding (including funding for "well-woman" gynecological exams).
Meanwhile, the "Stop Taxpayer Funded Abortions Act" which has 221
co-sponsors and is now being considered by the U.S. House of
Representatives, would further curtail abortion access, especially for
poor women, and create further disincentives for health care plans to
cover abortion services. One especially important element of the
proposed law is that while Medicaid will currently pay for abortions in
the case of rape, the proposed law would narrow this to "forcible
rape," which eliminates statutory rape.
Reproductive justice activists have worked overtime to fight this
latest challenge, objecting to this as a cynical tactic that
fundamentally blames women of color as either stupid or collaborators
with murderous racism and sexism. One of the most intriguing fruits of
their labor is a newly nuanced understanding of the historical
relationship between Planned Parenthood founder Margaret Sanger and
Black communities. According to research by the Sister Song Women of
Color Reproductive Justice Collective, "African American leaders had
worked with Sanger in the 1930s to ask for clinics in black communities.
We challenged our opponents' historical revisionism by citing famous
leaders like Mary McLeod Bethune, W.E.B. Dubois, Walter White, Mary
Church Terrell, Rev. Adam Clayton Powell, Sr., and Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., and organizations like the NAACP, the National Urban League
and the National Council of Negro Women. We dared them to call these
icons of the civil rights movement pawns of a racist
agenda."[10] Sister
Song's work signals a new level of complexity in the discourse on
reproductive freedom, a complexity that is on view in many pieces in
this issue. Along with the aforementioned piece by Jesudason,
Faith
Pennick's groundbreaking film Silent Choices undermines the
characterization of Black women who opt for abortion as "dupes" or
enemies of Black people's advancement. These themes are also echoed in
Michele Goodwin's analysis of fetal protection laws, and the response to
Goodwin by Jeanne Flavin and Carol Mason.
In these pieces, women who are
particularly vulnerable to State and medical surveillance by virtue of
their poverty and/or race are shown to be targeted both as individually
"suspect" (potential or actual) mothers, and also as representing a
"wedge" that abortion opponents can use to advance the legal status of
fetuses in order to curtail abortion.
In linking reproduction to social, political, and economic power, the
activist movement for reproductive justice has an academic "sibling"
that emerged around the same time. If a single term can capture this
thread of feminist scholarship, it would probably be Shellee Colen's
notion of "stratified reproduction," which she first articulated in 1986
and elaborated in a chapter of Faye Ginsburg and Rayna Rapp's landmark
volume Conceiving the New World Order: The Global Politics of
Reproduction. Ginsburg and Rapp succinctly celebrated Colen's notion
with the observation that it "helps us see the arrangements by which
some reproductive futures are valued while others are
despised."[11]
Pointing to the role of "hierarchies of class, race, ethnicity, gender,
place in a global economy, and migration status," Colen argued that:
The reproductive labor—physical, mental, and
emotional—of bearing, raising, and socializing children and of creating and
maintaining households and people (from infancy to old age) is
differentially experienced, valued, and rewarded according to
inequalities of access to material and social resources in particular
historical and cultural contexts. Stratified reproduction, particularly
with the increasing commodification of reproductive labor, itself
reproduces stratification by reflecting, reinforcing, and intensifying
the inequalities on which it is based.[12]
Stratified reproduction transforms the meaning of reproductive
ethics. When ethical issues are addressed in mainstream reproductive
rights discourse, dominated as it is by the concerns of white, Western,
relatively affluent, heterosexual women, ethics are generally framed in
terms of individual choice, freedom, and privacy. Women are described as
actually or potentially in conflict with fetuses, men/fathers, medicine,
employers, or the State, but rarely with each other, and rarely do the
reproductive struggles women face in these narratives stem from anything
other than their female embodiment and gender oppression (both imagined
as more or less universal). Both reproductive justice and stratified
reproduction frameworks shatter the fantasy of the "universal woman,"
and direct our focus away from individuals to the level of the social:
social structures, social hierarchies of oppression and privilege, and
social histories. Rather than the generic (and therefore implicitly
privileged) Woman, these frameworks require consideration of
actual women, in all their varied, complex, and
hierarchically-arranged social locations. Pursuing reproductive justice
demands that we ask, "How are the burdens and possibilities for bearing
and rearing children distributed?"
Further, to understand these distributions not merely as neutral
differences in individual "abilities" to reproduce, we have to also ask:
"What are the histories and the social structures that have created
these current conditions?" That is, we must seek to understand how
reproductive resources (as well as imperatives to reproduce or not) are
actively distributed, rather than naturally occurring. Human
reproduction, whether "assisted" and "technological" or not, is an
inherently social process, and a historically contingent one. By
historicizing the conditions of reproduction, such questions return us
again to the possibility of transforming human reproduction to
fit with a broad vision of social justice.
Of course, reproduction has already been undergoing sweeping
transformations in the past few decades with the rapid rise of assisted
reproduction, especially via reproductive technologies. New
reproductive technologies have helped to generate not only millions of
children, but also a vast and diverse literature on the ethical and
political questions raised by the use of these new technologies.
Interestingly, though, specific attention to the way that the uses of
reproductive technologies are entangled with questions of social justice
has been relatively sparse. Ginsburg and Rapp's volume, mentioned
earlier, is an exquisite exception to this statement. In that volume,
contributors considered technologies such as national abortion policies,
prenatal diagnostic screening, midwifery, in vitro fertilization,
nannying, hormonal birth control, and coitus interruptus (to name just a
handful) with an eye towards "comprehend[ing] the transnational
inequalities on which reproductive practices, policies, and politics
increasingly depend."[13]
There have been few entries in this
overlapping field since, though two notable short pieces include Emily
Galpern's concise "Assisted Reproductive Technologies: Overview and
Perspective Using a Reproductive Justice Framework," written for the
Center for Genetics and Society,[14]
and a recent essay extending the
concept to a "post-human" and environmental frame by
Greta Gaard.[15] An
especially exciting recent addition is Wendy Chavkin and JaneMaree
Maher's 2010 edited volume The Globalization of Motherhood:
Deconstructions and Reconstructions of Biology and
Care.[16] With
this special issue of S&F Online, we don't presume to cover the
vast territory of entanglement between reproductive technologies and
social justice, but rather to contribute to mapping it, and to push some
of its apparent boundaries.
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