This issue was interested in Reproductive justice. Reproductive justice is a broad term. For us, it encompasses three core tenets: the right to have children, the right not to have children, and the right to raise children in safety. From access to abortion to the ability to see ones children, into adulthood – safe from state violence and neglect. We were interested in everything from personal experiences to academic reflections and professional insights.
Whether you’ve experienced reproductive injustice first hand or campaign for changes in the law – we wanted to hear about it. How is reproductive justice reproduced, or indeed undermined, in fiction? What does sociology have to say about it? How does it intersect with decoloniality or disability justice? We were interested in it …
This issue was interested in Reproductive justice. Reproductive justice is a broad term. For us, it encompasses three core tenets: the right to have children, the right not to have children, and the right to raise children in safety. From access to abortion to the ability to see ones children, into adulthood – safe from state violence and neglect. We were interested in everything from personal experiences to academic reflections and professional insights.
Whether you’ve experienced reproductive injustice first hand or campaign for changes in the law – we wanted to hear about it. How is reproductive justice reproduced, or indeed undermined, in fiction? What does sociology have to say about it? How does it intersect with decoloniality or disability justice? We were interested in it all.