Reproductive justice (RJ) is a social justice orientation undergirded by the right to sexual, gender, and bodily autonomy. It consists of three core tenets:: 1) the right to have a child, 2) the right to not have a child, and 3) the right to raise a child in safe and sustainable communities. It is a movement that focuses on uplifting and empowering the voices of individuals who have been historically oppressed, a movement that is a natural fit with social works orientation of socialjustice, empowering marginalized groups, and more. This book takes each core tenet of RJ and explores them through a social work lens, seamlessly mapping core ethics and values of social work onto the praxis of RJ.Written by interdisciplinary authors of many identities, Social Work and Reproductive Justice introduces readers to the foundations of RJ as applied to social work through history and ethics, followed by an exploration of how the main tenets of RJ apply to areas of social work including work with abortion, confronting infertility, social work practice in fetal care centers, environmental justice advocacy, resources in schools, intervention in prison environments, and more. Each chapterconcludes with a Voices from the Field section that features the real-life work of RJ advocates doing the work in the field.
Foreword; List of Contributors; Introduction; Part 1. Introduction to Reproductive Justice; What Is Reproductive Justice?; Social Work and Reproductive Justice: A Necessary Fit; Part 2. The Right to Have a Child; Challenging the Legacy: Pathways to Equitable Maternity Care in Modern America; Bearing Witness: A Black Woman Feminists Reflections on Prison-Based Doula Work; Social Work and Fertility Access as a Component of Reproductive Justice Using the Socio-Ecological Framework; Social Work, Reproductive Justice, and Maternal-Fetal Surgery; Part 3. The Right to Not Have a Child; The End of Roe: How Abortion Became Illegal Again; The Dobbs Decision and Its Implications for Reproductive Justice; Abortion Before 20 Weeks; Later Abortions: The Who, Why, and Wherefore; Part 4. The Right to Parent in Safe and Sustainable Communities; Countering Deficit School Narratives, and Centering School Community Through a Reproductive Justice Framework; Social Work Practice and Environmental Reproductive Justice; Afterword; Index;
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