My first week as an LSRJ intern
“I’m working for Law Students for Reproductive Justice… It’s a pro-choice group.” By the fifth time someone asked me what I was doing for the summer, I had become used to the follow-up question. For the last year, since I became a member, I thought that reproductive justice was simply a nice way of saying “pro-choice.” To paraphrase Bruce Lee in Enter the Dragon (and Buddhist philosophy), I quickly learned that I was pointing at the moon… focusing on the finger, and missing all of the heavenly glory.
At the
The RJ movement is more than ensuring that people have access to abortions. Reproductive justice ensures that everyone has the right to make an informed decision regarding the time and manner that they reproduce. This definition encompasses immigrants’ rights, environmental justice, social justice, LGBTQIQ issues, abortion rights, and numerous other issues. We don’t have reproductive justice if women don’t have the right to an abortion, but we also don’t have reproductive justice when women can’t access prenatal care. We are fighting for both the ability to procure birth control, and the ability to access assisted reproductive technology.
As part of my internship this summer, I am working with the California Healthy Nail Salon Collaborative to ensure that chemicals used in nail salons are not harmful to either workers or patrons. As I learn more about the toxins that are part of every day items, I think about how the term “reproductive justice” enables me to talk about this issue more coherently. It represents a philosophy that I have always held dear, but have never really been able to express: the hope that everyone will be able to choose when, and if, they want to have children, without any other factors standing in the way of them exercising that right.
-Jacob Johnson
June 17th, 2009 at 4:14 pm
I found this blog recently and I have to say that I absolutely love it.
When I worked for Planned Parenthood and still pretty naive, I remember the solid thud with which the concept of reproductive justice hit home when I found out that long-term birth control was being “marketed” (read: pushed) to low income women and women of color as a way to control their sexuality, despite elevated risks associated with Depo Provera and the old Norplant. Because of course (marginalized) women are untrustworthy and unresponsible with their reproductive health. It was a (barely) modified version of the Tuskegee Experiment and Eugenics-based forced sterilization and it was terrifying.
Which is to say that I am so excited and grateful that there are people like you and the other folks involved with Law Students for Reproductive Justice out there actively working to ensure reproductive justice at all levels.