海角大神

Beyond abortion rights: Reproductive justice takes a broader view

A demonstrator reacts to speeches as the groups Black Feminist Future and SisterSong: Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective, accompanied by other civil rights organizations, hold a Black Bodies for Black Power rally in Washington on June 18, 2022, to advocate for abortion access.听

Shuran Huang/Reuters

June 22, 2022

Toni McClendon has fought for reproductive and minority rights in Pittsburgh for decades. But she has long eschewed the labels 鈥減ro-choice鈥 and 鈥減ro-life鈥 as divisive, limiting and above all failing to address what many Black women experience in America鈥檚 shrill reproduction debate.

Then, when she was asked to join Black women from the Rust Belt for the March for Women鈥檚 Lives in Washington聽in 2004, she found 鈥渞eproductive justice,鈥 a movement that went beyond that simple binary to cooperate with allies on a host of issues facing minorities 鈥 and one that has come to the fore as American women wait to see if Roe v. Wade will be rolled back.听Ms. McClendon returned home from the march to become one of the founding members of New Voices for Reproductive Justice in Pittsburgh.

鈥淚 support the right to have a child, the right not to have a child, and the right to raise families in a world that is fair and equitable. That鈥檚 the core of reproductive justice,鈥 she says. 鈥淚n this country, it鈥檚 always an either/or. If you do this, then you can鈥檛 be this. And if you鈥檙e not this, then we鈥檙e against you. Everything is an 鈥榰s and them鈥 thing, instead of a 鈥榳e鈥 thing.鈥

Why We Wrote This

Rejecting a rigid 鈥減ro-choice鈥 or 鈥減ro-life鈥 binary, reproductive justice advocates see women鈥檚 right to parent 鈥 or not 鈥 as an encompassing social justice issue, requiring cooperation on matters like voting rights and overpolicing.

As the U.S. Supreme Court appears poised to overturn America鈥檚 constitutionally protected right to abortion in its upcoming ruling on Dobbs v. Jackson Women鈥檚 Health Organization, those on the front lines of the reproductive rights movement frame it as a door closing after 50 years of abortion access.

But for many Black and other minority women across the country, the entryway to abortion access has long been shut by financial and cultural barriers. That鈥檚 why they began reframing reproductive rights as a matter of social justice in the 1990s.

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Now the leaders of reproductive justice, often called RJ, say their vision is the way forward for those who will be made most vulnerable if the leaked draft opinion stands, returning the abortion question to the states.

Toni McClendon, a founding member of New Voices for Reproductive Justice in Pittsburgh, says the terms "pro-choice" and "pro-life" simply divide the American public. The reproductive justice movement has a more expansive view of reproductive rights that builds coalitions with other social justice movements.
Sara Miller Llana/海角大神

Implicit in the RJ movement is support for abortion rights, but many observers say RJ has the potential to help Americans understand a much more expansive view, since it also focuses on the right to have children and to nurture them in a safe and healthy environment. An encompassing social justice movement, RJ has grown alongside a larger reckoning on racism, inequality, and environmental rights.

鈥淩J is a way of the future,鈥 says Elaina Ramsey, executive director of Faith Choice Ohio, a faith-based group that supports abortion rights and works with RJ leaders in the Midwest. 鈥淚t鈥檚 fundamentally a lifestyle practice. They鈥檙e trying to build communities, raise families whatever they look like and with whatever decisions they want to make.鈥

鈥淪ettled law but not settled reality鈥

Since its founding in the 1990s, RJ has grown across racial and ethnic lines and across the United States, from the Pacific Northwest to the Rust Belt. For example, Black women from around the country joined RJ advocates in Washington over the Juneteenth weekend in a march dubbed Black Bodies for Black Power.听

It鈥檚 also increasingly a campaign issue. La鈥橳asha D. Mayes, founder and former executive director of New Voices for Reproductive Justice, is running for office as a state representative in Pennsylvania, having scored the Democratic primary in May. 鈥淲hite women thought Roe v. Wade was the end of the attack or that the legal precedent would actually get us where we need to be,鈥 says the candidate, who put RJ as her top platform issue. 鈥淏ut for Black women and marginalized communities, it was settled law but not settled reality.鈥

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鈥淭he shorthand in politics is pro-choice, a woman鈥檚 right to choose,鈥 she continues. 鈥淭hose things are so limiting in terms of the actual depth and breadth of reproductive justice issues or concerns that voters and constituents have.鈥

The term 鈥渞eproductive justice鈥 was coined by 12 Black feminists, and later the movement was turned into a collective called SisterSong, based in the South. The founders felt shut out of the discussion on reproductive rights, despite the disproportionate toll that pregnancies and unwanted pregnancies take on minority women. According to 2011 data from the Guttmacher Institute, the unintended pregnancy rate for non-Hispanic Black women (79 per 1,000) is more than double that of non-Hispanic white women (33 per 1,000) 鈥 often because of a lack of access to reproductive services and contraception. Minority women overall face far higher rates of preterm deliveries and infant mortality, and they suffer worse maternal health outcomes and .听

But Black women have been skeptical of reproductive rights movements that were tied historically to forced sterilization, says Ms. McClendon. 鈥淲hat most people knew about reproductive health was Planned Parenthood,鈥 she says, an organization that lost the Black community鈥檚 trust due to co-founder Margaret Sanger鈥檚 ties to eugenics.

Demonstrators, including reproductive justice advocates, walk to the U.S. Supreme Court during the Black Bodies for Black Power rally in Washington, June 18, 2022. Since its founding in the 1990s, RJ has grown across racial and ethnic lines and across the U.S., from the Pacific Northwest to the Rust Belt.
Shuran Huang/Reuters

By contrast, she says, RJ gained trust through a broad association with social justice groups, including environmental justice, voting rights, equal pay, and ending police brutality.

鈥淭he idea of choice was really limited as a framework because of these histories, because of the fact that for many communities of color, choice wasn鈥檛 just about whether or not you could have an abortion. It was about whether or not you could actually have children,鈥 says Zakiya Luna, author of 鈥淩eproductive Rights as Human Rights: Women of Color and the Fight for Reproductive Justice.鈥澛

鈥淲hat we鈥檙e trying to do ... is to say there鈥檚 a range of reproductive justice issues that, particularly in marginalized communities, choice does not get at,鈥 she adds.

Coalition building

That range of issues invites cooperation. 鈥淚 find so much common ground with reproductive justice,鈥 says Destiny Herndon-De La Rosa, founder of the anti-abortion New Wave Feminists in Texas, which seeks an end to abortion through systematic change. She says the RJ movement recognizes that everything from racism to overpolicing has impacted Black women鈥檚 reproductive choices. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a much more nuanced perspective. ... So they鈥檙e not fighting for it in the same way that a lot of more privileged white feminists are fighting for it.鈥澛

While the Black feminist community launched RJ, the movement has entered the discussion in nursing schools, law schools, and . Sometimes the term is co-opted, and those working in it are careful to honor its roots as a Black movement.听

RJ advocates have shown the feminist movement how exclusive it鈥檚 been, says Greer Donley, assistant professor of law at the University of Pittsburgh. 鈥淲e鈥檙e really trying to forge allies with a huge cohort of people in a way that the reproductive rights movement of generations past has not. I think we鈥檙e kind of at this moment because that model failed,鈥 she says.

Dana Sussman, acting executive director of National Advocates for Pregnant Women, concurs. 鈥淲hat they have shifted is the understanding that this is not just about abortion, that abortion is but one piece of this much larger ecosystem. That environmental justice is reproductive justice. That criminal justice reform is reproductive justice. That immigrant justice is reproductive justice. ... We have the reproductive justice leaders and the mothers of the movement to thank for helping the rest of us understand that voting rights is a reproductive justice issue, that all of these things are so deeply interconnected,鈥 she says.听

鈥淏uilding those coalitions now in this crisis moment, and moving forward to collectively imagine a new vision to uplift this vision that they鈥檝e had for a long time, is just incredibly important.鈥