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WGST and LGBTQ Studies Joint Statement Condemning Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization decision

We, the faculty of the Department of Women and Gender Studies and the Certificate Program in LGBTQ Studies, strongly condemn the Supreme Court ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. The ruling, issued on June 24, 2022, eliminates the constitutional right to an abortion, almost 50 years after the landmark Roe v. Wade case secured federal protections for it. We are saddened and outraged as we anticipate the cascading effects of this ruling, particularly as it will most devastatingly impact Black, Indigenous, and Latinx women, and other w

Micah Bazant
omen of Color (); poor, disabled, and LGBTQ women; ; and nonbinary people who are pregnancy-capable.

We draw from the developed by Black women, Women of Color, and other nonbinary and trans People of Color, which calls for us to situate this latest attack on abortion on a longer continuum of reproductive injustice, including histories of forced sterilization, lack of access to contraception and family planning, and inhumane conditions of pregnancy and childbirth in US jails and prisons and in countries impacted by US imperial wars. We locate this ruling within a larger trend toward austerity measures that severely curtail the right to live a full and dignified life, including a shrinking social safety net, lack of access to state-supported childcare, and growing food insecurity in the wake of a pandemic that has forced record numbers of women out of the workplace.

While this moment is being framed as a to pre-Roe days, we must also be attentive to how it heralds new efforts to surveil bodies seen as unruly and criminalize those who seek agency and self-determination over their own bodies, whether the right to decide whether or not to carry a pregnancy to term, the right to parent a child in a safe and healthy environment, or the right to determine one’s own gender and seek gender-affirming care.

As a department invested in intersectional, transnational, and decolonial feminist scholarship, we also wish to underscore how attacks on the reproductive freedoms of women and pregnancy-capable people in the United States are tied to the undermining of reproductive health globally by the US. For example, the infamous “” introduced by Ronald Reagan in 1984, reinstated by Donald Trump in 2017, and most recently rescinded by Joe Biden in 2022, prevented foreign NGOs (non-governmental organizations) receiving any US global health assistance from even using their own funds to provide services or information for legal abortions in their respective countries. As we fight to reinstate and secure access to abortion for women and people who can become pregnant within the US, we must also continually challenge these imperialist histories of foreign aid, echoing the transnational feminist expressions of solidarity globally. This includes support from Latin American feminists – especially from Mexico, where Mexico’s Supreme Court moved last year to decriminalize abortion – and including UNFPA, the International Planned Parenthood Federation, and the Global Fund for Women.

In Colorado, where access to abortion will be preserved for the time being, we stand in solidarity with abortion providers who will continue to serve Colorado’s population and the populations of our neighboring states, many of which will outlaw or severely restrict abortion in the coming .

We recognize the importance of Colorado organizations - including COLOR, The Brazen Project, and the Colorado Doula Project - that work tirelessly to fight for access to abortion, especially for communities that face socio-economic barriers to accessing reproductive services, including those across state lines.

In closing, we call for the 鶹Ƶ to stand as a leader in opposing threats to bodily sovereignty. CU must pledge to provide continued access to accessible, inclusive, and gender-affirming reproductive health services and contraception on campus. We also call on CU Boulder's Health and Wellness Services and the Wardenburg Health Center to distribute information that warns students about the prevalence of (so-called “Crisis Pregnancy Centers”) in Boulder, which masquerade as abortion clinics while actually providing medically inaccurate information and targeting low-income students and students of color.

In solidarity,

The Faculty of the Department of Women & Gender Studies and the Certificate Program in LGBTQ Studies, 鶹Ƶ

Painting by Micah Bazant created in 2020 for the 47th anniversary of Roe v Wade with , , Kenya Martin, Jasmine Burnett, Bianca Campbell, Adwoa B. Agyepong and Kemi Alabi. Words originally by , used with permission.

Resources for Action, Engagement and Reflection about Abortion

In solidarity with our activist communities, we offer the following resources, compiled by reproductive justice activist and WGST graduate, Mar Galvez-Seminario.

If You Need to Access an Abortion or Reproductive Care:

 

Wardenburg Health Center at CU

 

Fact Sheets on Abortion:

 

To Volunteer:

 

To Donate:

(offering later abortions)

 

 

Media Guides:

 

Scholarship on Abortion and Reproductive Justice:

. Compiled by Saloni Bhaman at the Asian American Writers Workshop.

, Loretta J. Ross, Lynn Roberts, Erika Derkas, Whitney Peoples, and Pamela Bridgewater Toure (eds.)

, Marlene Gerber Fried, Elena Gutiérrez, Loretta Ross, and Jael Silliman

"," Emily Janakiram

 

Scholarship by WGST faculty on Abortion and Reproductive Justice:

“Guerreras y Puentes: the theory and praxis of Latina(x) activism” by Celeste Montoya and Mar Galvez-Seminario

by Michael Tooley, Celia Wolf-Devine, Philip E. Devine, and Alison M. Jaggar

by Samira K. Mehta and Lauren MacIvor Thompson

by Samira K. Mehta

by Samira K. Mehta

by Samira K. Mehta

featuring Samira K. Mehta

by Lorraine Bayard de Volo