A super informative and comprehensive introduction to the subject of reproductive justice, a coin termed in 1994 by Black women to emphasize the need to intersect reproductive health issues with social justice issues. Reproductive justice goes beyond the pro-life/pro-choice debate to insist that reproductive health is more than just the right to have an abortion and the right to afforable, accessible contraception. To be able to make choices surrounding childbirth and motherhood, people need (and have a right to) access to a living wage, good schools, safe and healthy environments, and high-quality, affordable medical care, as well as relief from other issues that threaten communities, such as police violence, homophobia and gender-based violence, and systemic racism that creates policies to limit and control peoples’ reproductive decisions.
This book was written as an introduction for new audiences. It covers a large swath of issues that RJ seeks to address and it does so in a clear and direct manner. Some of the subsections that presented new issues were brief and clearly served as introductions to list the complexity of the issues and the vast ways they intersect with RJ or are a part of the thesis of RJ. While these sections did not go in depth and felt like more of an outline of topics, they still provided a complex overview of the subject. Even the chapters that did bestow a large number of pages to the topic, such as the history chapter, could clearly be expanded on, each subject within capable of being its own book. Because I sometimes craved more information, I looked to the bibliography and notes sections to find the articles and books it drew from. I’m hoping to dive into some of these texts soon. As an introduction to the topic, however, this book does a phenomenal job.
Another aspect of this book worth noting is that it is academic, almost textbook-like at times, and does not tell a story (though it does draw from the lived experiences of individuals and lists examples of people and cases that have been affected by reproductive injustices). I am fascinated by this subject and did not mind this, but this isn’t a narrative nonfiction.