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January 2012

Looking Forward to the Spring at Harvard

Joanne Caceres, Harvard Law School

It is a cold and quiet month for Harvard LSRJ. Our “January Term” is winding down, a one month term where one can take a class, write a paper, or work at an externship, and it  means that Harvard students spread out across the country and organization activities slow down. But that’s not to say we’re not revving up for the spring! We are looking forward to our regional conference in February, our annual Sex-Ed Trivia event, and an in-the-works social justice conference centered around economic justice.

In addition, Harvard is offering an International Reproductive Rights Reading Group, which I and several LSRJ’ers will be eagerly participating in. The reading group coincides with one of our goals for our chapter this term, which is to put on at least one event about reproductive justice in the international sphere. Of course, there is also plenty going on domestically, and I am disappointed with politicians on the right and left (Mitt Romney’s statement that Griswold v. Connecticut may have been improperly decided and Obama’s support of Kathleen Sebelius’ reversal of the FDA’s recommendation to sell Plan B over the counter to minors both immediately come to mind). It all reminds me that it is an important time for lawyers who care about reproductive justice to be involved.

March 1st, 2012 National Day of Action for Education: Lessons from the 2011 Chilean Student Movement

I have been working with a few fellow students in planning some events on our campus in regards to the nationwide March 1st Day of Action for Education. Students for a Democratic Society is circulating the below statement:

March 1st, 2012: National Day of Action For Education

We refuse to pay for the crisis created by the 1%. We refuse to accept the dismantling of our schools and universities, while the banks and corporations make record profits. We refuse to accept educational re-segregation, massive tuition increases, outrageous student debt, and increasing privatization and corporatization.

They got bailed out and we got sold out. But through nationally coordinated mass action we can and will turn back the tide of austerity.

We call on all students, teachers, workers, and parents from all levels of education —pre-K-12 through higher education in public and private institutions— and all Occupy assemblies, labor unions, and organizations of oppressed communities, to mobilize on March 1st, 2012 across the country to tell those in power: The resources exist for high-quality education for all. If we make the rich and the corporations pay we can reverse the budget cuts, tuition hikes, and attacks on job security, and fully fund public education and social services.

This is a call to work together, but it is up to each school and organization to determine what local and regional actions—such as strikes, walkouts, occupations, marches, etc.—they will take to say no to business as usual.

We have the momentum, the numbers, and the determination to win. Education is not for sale. Let’s take back our schools. Let's make history.

Initial Endorsers: New York City Student AssemblyOccupy Education Northern CaliforniaOccupy Chicago Education CommitteeOccupy CollegesOccupy EducationStudents for a Democratic Society – National Working CommitteeStudents United for a Free CUNYUniversity Professional and Technical Employees – CWA 9119 (University of California)Cal State East Bay Chapter of CFA (California Faculty Association)CACHE (Coalition Against Corporate Higher Education) Occupy UniversitySan Francisco Labor Council, Executive CommitteeSave our Schools Coalition, Rhode IslandOccupy Boston StudentsCUNY-Wide General Assembly, City University of New York

This past Saturday, January 28th, 2012, a few representatives of SDSU, UCSD, and San Diego City College, including myself, traveled to Pasadena to meet with students from all over Southern California at the Crisis in Education: So. Cal. Conference and Organizing Meeting to ensure that our student movement(s) will be coordinated and successful. We talked a little bit about drawing from the Chilean student protests that began in 2011. I did some research and found an excellent analysis of the Chilean student movement's successes and "limits" ("limits" the author writes in "scare quotes" because "the inability of students so far to articulate themselves as part of a counter-hegemonic bloc is actually not their responsibility but a failure of political understanding more broadly).

Some highlights from the article:

What is essential is the demand for free higher education for all, a demand that has been criticized as unrealistic and naive; this demand goes right to the heart of calls for a reformulation of the social contract inherited from Pinochet’s regime...This is why the student mobilizations are inherently political, and subversive: they expose the unjust distribution of wealth, and the real purpose of those mechanisms of appropriation and accumulation shaping the current class configuration of Chilean society. However spectacular the recent celebrations of Chile’s bicentenary, they could not hide the actual reality at issue in the temporality of capitalism. Piñera’s government has not listened to the students and perpetually challenges their claim for free education for all, replacing it with the empty notion of a ‘better quality’ education for all. The notion of quality operates in the government’s discourse in very much the same way as the notion of ‘excellence’ does in what Bill Reading calls the ‘University in Ruins’, as an ideological device that means more or less whatever you want it to mean, if not nothing at all...

On the other hand, the return of what Daniel Bensaïd might call ‘the question of strategy’ need not involve a choice between starkly opposed options: either traditional parties or a new messianic political organization; either the self-assertion of the multitude or a more traditional form of class antagonism; either the traditional dogmatic Left or the chastened, reformist or ‘realistic’ socialism of the new millennium. To resolve these tensions is less the responsibility of the students than of the wider radical Left, one that is able to contest the ongoing savagery of capitalist accumulation without ceasing to imagine a better and more equitable world.

For those of you who are not familiar with the Chilean student movement, here is a general overview published by New York Times yesterday, as well as a video from Camila, and Free Education in Chile's YouTube channel.

Contraception as Prevention in the Fight for Reproductive Autonomy

Mallory Carlberg, University of Oklahoma College of Law

*This post is part of a series written in support of Trust Women Week Silver Ribbon Campaign and the online virtual march from January 20-27. LSRJ is proud to partner with numerous orgs across the country – join the march by sending a message to your lawmakers today! And check back here throughout the week for more posts.

With the anniversary of Roe and the start of a new year, January is a time of reflection for the reproductive justice movement. Reproductive rights organizations publish summaries of the previous year’s anti-abortion legislation and predict what’s to come as state legislatures reconvene. OU LSRJ students have been discussing new bills Oklahoma legislators will introduce this session. In addition to the widely publicized bill outlawing the use of fetuses in the food industry. Legislators will also introduce a personhood bill and a bill requiring the use of an electric fetal heart monitor during abortion procedures. It’s easy to focus solely on the abortion debate since abortion opponents are often loudest about this issue. But there is another issue that deserves our attention: the idea of contraception as prevention.

I want to be clear that what I mean by contraception as prevention is not that we should be preventing abortions. Once we start saying there are good and bad reasons to have abortions, we are no longer trusting women. Our focus instead should be on preventing unplanned pregnancy. Of course this would also prevent abortions, but we should be supporting contraception because it helps people control when or if they have a child and not solely because it prevents abortions.

This year extremist anti-birth control views reached the mainstream. Four GOP presidential candidates participated in a debate sponsored by Personhood USA and signed a “personhood pledge”. Rick Santorum, a GOP frontrunner, has gone so far as to call birth control dangerous because it enables people to have non-procreative sex. And here in Oklahoma a well-known Representative went on record saying that some forms of birth control kill a person. The previous examples show that although Griswold v. Connecticut established a right to privacy and a right to contraception way back in 1965, these rights are still not secure. Affordable, accessible birth control is still not a reality for all.

This year there were both victories and setbacks in the fight to expand birth control access. Under the Affordable Care Act most women employed in the US will have their birth control fully covered by their insurance and religiously affiliated employers will not be exempt from this. However, this year HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius vetoed the FDA’s recommendation that Plan B be available to teens under 17 without a prescription. Pharmacists also continue to deny adult men and women access to emergency contraception based on misunderstandings about the law or moral objections to the method.

As we celebrate Roe this week, we should remember that making affordable and accessible birth control is just as important as making abortion affordable and accessible. People need both birth control and access to safe abortions to achieve reproductive autonomy.

Happy 39th, Roe!

Susy Prochazka, Thomas Jefferson School of Law

*This post is part of a series written in support of Trust Women Week Silver Ribbon Campaign and the online virtual march from January 20-27. LSRJ is proud to partner with numerous orgs across the country – join the march by sending a message to your lawmakers today! And check back here throughout the week for more posts.

As the 39th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision came and went this weekend, the TJSL chapter was excited to celebrate the decision in a variety of ways. We have a great relationship with The Lawyers Club of San Diego, a local group that focuses on empowering women lawyers, and on Saturday they hosted  an educational luncheon titled “That Was Then, This is Now: Reproductive Rights Update,” highlighting recent changes in reproductive rights and justice legislation. After the panel, we attended a Roe v. Wade Anniversary Dinner, an annual event thrown by the Coalition for Reproductive Choice. This year, the dinner focused on the global reach of RJ issues, featuring speakers discussing local, national, and international fights for reproductive rights. Mary Fjerstad, Director of Medical Affairs & Pharmacovigilance at WomanCare, spoke on the global movement in the fields of reproductive health care.  Kimala Price, Professor, San Diego State University &  Board Member of SisterSong, provided the national perspective by presenting on the anti-choice and racist billboards that have cropped up in Atlanta and New York earlier in 2011. Lastly,  Shukri Adam, Public Health Nurse Consultant Somali & Arabic at the Central Region Public Health Center, spoke of the cultural gaps that female Somali immigrants face in California in regards to their pregnancies.

And the celebrating is far from done! In February, our school is hosting the National Women and the Law Conference, an annual conference that explores the different issues that women face in the legal realm.  Our chapter has established such a presence on campus in the past that this year our faculty advisor was chosen to direct this year’s conference, and she swiftly designated the theme of Reproductive Justice.  Some of our board worked extensively on the Conference committee, performing community outreach and assisting with the hunt for speakers. All this hard work on the part of our members paid off when Sarah Weddington agreed to be the Keynote speaker.

At each initial meeting of the semester, each of our LSRJ board members shares what RJ means to us. We then carry this theme of personalizing the movement throughout the year, with each board member striving to educate and encourage interest in his or her particular niche view of RJ. Roe is incredibly important to all of us, albeit in different ways.  Roe is important to Sarah, our VP of Events, because it expanded access to abortions, making it safer to obtain one. Roe is important to Margaret because it provided an avenue to lessen patriarchal dominance in the family, potentially aiding women in abusive relationships. Roe is important to Thomas as a matter of health law, increasing the autonomy of private medical decisions. To all of us, Roe represents a pivotal decision, advancing each of our respective areas of interest in the RJ movement. 

In the space of one month, our chapter will be celebrating the continuing importance of Roe v. Wade at three amazing events, all of which present different avenues of reproductive justice. While Roe is only one facet of the RJ movement, it illustrates that the law, while never a perfect answer to society’s problems, may nonetheless be used as a tool to shape social justice movements.

Roe, Roe, Roe your Vote

Burke Bindbeutel, University of Missouri School of Law

*This post is part of a series written in support of Trust Women Week Silver Ribbon Campaign and the online virtual march from January 20-27. LSRJ is proud to partner with numerous orgs across the country – join the march by sending a message to your lawmakers today! And check back here throughout the week for more posts.

The anniversary of Roe v. Wade reminds our Mizzou LSRJ chapter of what an important milestone the 1973 Supreme Court decision was. In the face of years of entrenched opposition, the Court affirmed a woman’s right to terminate a pregnancy. While reproductive justice advocates should cherish the power that the decision granted them, the anniversary also should remind us that Norma McCorvey’s lawsuit was in fact a partial victory. Supreme Court decisions can flip controversial laws, but the most important decisions also inspire backlashes. When reproductive justice is “constitutionalized,” it becomes denatured and defensive. Mizzou LSRJ has been at pains to not be stigmatized as “The Abortion Club,” a state of affairs at least partially due to Roe v. Wade.

The decision interrupted an evolving political discourse, and rested upon an unwieldy compromise. Roe extended Griswold v. Connecticut’s right to privacy to a woman’s decision to abort, but it also stressed that the government had a stake in that decision. Justice Harry Blackmun addressed public safety concerns by discussing fetus “viability,” a slippery term, then and now. The Court did not inform America about when a state’s interest in the potential life of a fetus eclipses a woman’s self-sovereignty.

Here in Missouri, we pioneered the sideways attack on a woman’s right to choose, which the Supreme Court deemed constitutional in Webster v. Reproductive Health Services. Rather than a frontal assault on abortion rights, the Missouri legislature in 1988 barred public funds from sponsoring abortion services or even counseling that related to abortion. Before this surprising decision, states had presumed that interfering with abortion rights would have been precluded by Roe. But in Webster, Justice Rehnquist had his revenge. The subsequent Planned Parenthood v. Casey elaborated on just how states can curtail rights not directly but through obstructive measures like parental consent and waiting periods. These later cases exposed the main flaw of Roe: it may have gone some ways towards shoring up individual rights, but mainly it served as a temporary stay on the anti-abortion brigades.

Neal Devins has argued that the compromises of Webster and Casey have struck a workable balance on the abortion issue. But it is not the role of the Supreme Court to author political consensus. And there is little evidence that partial victories have placated the religion-informed anti-Roe factions. Limited abortion rights are still intolerable to that contingent, and reproductive justice advocates cannot be satisfied with the lack of abortion services in 97 percent of Missouri counties, or the arbitrary requirement that doors in abortion clinics must be at least 44 inches wide.

Judicial fiats covering negative rights are not necessarily the best process by which to protect the dignity of a citizenry, argues Robin West. Roe’s deterioration has put RJ advocates on the defensive. The 1973 decision narrowly framed the broad reproductive justice debate. What could have been, and could still be, a conversation about self-sovereignty and the minimal state has become a fight about the appropriate circumstances for pregnancy termination.

We should not have to continually reexamine the penumbras of 1789 in order to obtain the autonomy that underlies the right to an abortion. Instead, we should expect it from our lawmakers, and throw them out on their ear if they don’t acknowledge us. Roe was a precious victory, but the Supreme Court can’t help us help ourselves.

Why the Fight Continues for Roe

Candace Gibson, University of Utah College of Law

*This post is part of a series written in support of Trust Women Week Silver Ribbon Campaign and the online virtual march from January 20-27. LSRJ is proud to partner with numerous orgs across the country – join the march by sending a message to your lawmakers today! And check back here throughout the week for more posts.

In May 2009, a 17-year-old girl in Naples, Utah, was pregnant.  She was charged with second-degree felony criminal solicitation to commit murder.  Why was she charged? She solicited a man to punch her in the stomach so that she would miscarry.  He accepted $150 from her, took her to the basement of his parent’s house, and kicked her in the stomach five times.  According to the young girl, who is now a young adult, she solicited the assault because her boyfriend threatened to break up with her if she did not terminate her pregnancy.  A juvenile court dismissed her case in 2009, but the Utah Supreme Court this past December reversed their decision.  They reasoned that an assault does not meet the statutory definition of abortion and now this young woman may face criminal penalties for this tragic incident in her life.

I don’t disagree with the Utah Supreme Court in saying that abortion as imagined by our state’s legislators is a medical procedure, although the term “medical” will most likely be co-opted by the Anti-Choice movement to exclude abortions achieved through pharmaceuticals (see the case of an Idaho woman who terminated her own pregnancy by ordering RU486 online and was charged  with a felony).  What I do disagree with is the numerous laws passed by state legislatures to restrict abortion services to the point that Roe v. Wade doesn’t make any impact in the lives of women who need it the most.  Remember what Justice Ginsburg said at the Aspen Institute in 2010, “If the court were to change its mind . . . the only women who would be truly affected are poor women. Because even at the time before Roe, women who wanted abortions could have a safe, legal abortion.”  The problem is, this great Justice has forgotten that most poor women still can’t have abortions because of the Hyde Amendment.

This young woman in Utah should have had the right to decide to be a parent, to give her born child up for adoption, or to have an abortion without emotional abuse from her boyfriend or having to deal with the heinous consequences and obstacles of laws that ultimately regulate abortions out of existence.  As the Guttmacher Institute said in their awesome video, “There will always be women who need abortions.”

A Potpourri of RJ Interests

Susy Prochazka, Thomas Jefferson School of Law

In our TJSL chapter, each member of the board is passionate about a different facet of the RJ movement.  This brings a great energy to our board and ensures that no one is ever bored (pun intended). To encourage this same vitality amongst our newest members, we decided early in the semester to have a different member of the board present on the topic of his or her particular passion at each monthly meeting in order to show the array of topics that RJ spans. Traditionally, our meetings were more informational and social in nature; through these presentations, we sought to increase the educational aspect of the monthly meetings.

Our secretary Margaret bravely volunteered to be the guinea pig of this experiment. As an intern at our local YWCA’s domestic violence clinic, Margaret wanted to promote October as Domestic Violence Awareness month at our school, which had remained conspicuously silent on the topic of DV in the past. Margaret did not limit herself to making a mere powerpoint citing the statistics and warnings signs of DV.  She completely committed herself to promoting the cause at our meeting by making shirts and ribbons and arranging a team for the “Mile in Her Shoes” charity walk that benefits a downtown safehouse program. Margaret’s dedication and energy was apparent during the meeting, and afterwards, two attendees, both of whom were attending their first ever LSRJ meeting, promptly signed up for the charity walk and inquired about other ways to promote DV awareness!  We considered the meeting a great success.

I went next. My interests lie in the realm of international human rights, so I focused on the theme of cultural restrictions on a woman’s right to choose. I presented on issues affecting women internationally that limit their right to exercise bodily autonomy, discussing some of the practices that impose these restrictions, such as honor killings, female genital cutting, forced marriages, and debt peonage/sex slavery.  I am no public speaker, but I tamped down my anxiety and spoke about what I am passionate about: addressing these international RJ issues. Afterwards I discussed international human rights internships with several members.  While I did not make fabulous shirts, as Margaret had, we are now planning a road trip to L.A. to see the Skirbal Museum Exhibit on the international oppression of women. With my area of focus, I felt that I was able to reach different people in the audience than Margaret had, which seems like a positive goal to have, as we are constantly engaging members in different ways. It was an experience that really let me really expound upon the area of law that I find fascinating while simultaneously snagging the attention of members interested in international law and drawing them into the discussion.

By letting our diverse interests lead the meetings, we are able to present a variety of topics to our members. We are pretty pleased with the level of interest that our presentations have generated, and the practice will continue into next semester.   Fascinated by health law, our co-president Thomas is arranging a panel regarding the legal implications of the different birthing options, whether adoption, traditional midwifery or obstetricians.  We look forward to another semester of harnessing our various passions in the RJ movement and using them to ensure our chapter’s diversity and longevity.

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