We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Reproductive justice: Born transnational.
- Abstract
Still, much of the male-dominated left compounded the strains on the left and feminist coalition by cheering the religious fundamentalists who had defeated the socialist and feminist movements in their country in the name of anti-US imperialism and anti-Zionism.[2] Feminists could hardly support right-wing fundamentalist movements that named anti-feminism as their raison d'etre, but the anti-imperialist boy-left began to call these movements as the heart of global anti-imperialism. Keywords: Cairo; Gabriela; human rights; reproductive justice; transnational feminism EN Cairo Gabriela human rights reproductive justice transnational feminism 1 7 7 12/13/21 20220101 NES 220101 In March 2021, it seemed to me that it was the first time in a while that I had felt the presence of large-scale celebrations of International Women's Day in the United States. While it was exciting to see feminism once again prominent on the cultural landscape, I was struck by how un-international these US celebrations of International Women's Day were, even as feminists elsewhere called attention to the annual celebration from virtually every continent, nation, and region. But mostly what it forgets is a debt to a global women's movement and those who risked their lives in the 1970s and '80s in places like the Philippines, Argentina, and El Salvador to insist that feminists qua feminists - and women as mothers - had a role to play in defying authoritarian regimes.
- Subjects
REPRODUCTIVE rights; HUMAN rights movements; TRANSNATIONAL education; WOMEN'S rights; FEMINISM; BLACK feminism; LATIN Americans; HISTORY of feminism
- Publication
Gender, Work & Organization, 2022, Vol 29, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
0968-6673
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/gwao.12765