Reproductive Justice and New Jersey

This blog will focus on reproductive justice issues in the state of New Jersey, and beyond. The term reproductive justice was coined by women of color, specifically the amazing women from SisterSong. The term is meant to be an expansion of the reproductive rights paradigm which focuses on the issues of birth control and abortion rights.
Reproductive Justice uses the experiences of women of color as the point of entry to discuss issues of reproductive rights and health. This shift in center more clearly puts into focus the ways that the interrelated systems of race, class, gender, and sexual orientation work to limit women's ability to gain and maintain control of their reproductive lives.
The reproductive justice framework facilitates a more nuanced discussion of issues such as access to abortion, health care, birthing, the right to reproductive health, eugenics, population control, and the many reproductive technologies that exist. I have great respect for the women who claimed the term Reproductive Justice and use it with care, especially as a white woman who has worked hard to understand the ways white privilege has affected her life and choices.

I look forward to an open dialogue about important issues in our community, and welcome comments both critical and affirming.


Tuesday, September 21, 2010

N.J. Senate fails to override Gov. Christie's veto of $7.5M in family planning funds | NJ.com

The New Jersey Senate failed to override the veto of family planning funds leaving a huge gap in healthcare for women and families.

The flowing news article from NJ.com is excellent. Stay tuned to Reproductive Justice NJ for more information.



N.J. Senate fails to override Gov. Christie's veto of $7.5M in family planning funds NJ.com

Sunday, September 19, 2010

10 Reasons to Reinstate Family Planning Funds.




Tomorrow is the override vote on family planning funds.  Here are 10 reasons this should be overturned:

1. 136,000 low-income women were served with     
     these funds last year.
2. 40,000 unplanned pregnancies were prevented.
3. 28,0000 HIV tests were administered.
4. 70,000 breast exams were performed. 
5. For every $1.00 spent, we will save $3.74 dollars. 
6. Every $1.00 spent would trigger $9.00 in federal matching funds.
7. We spent $65 million to ensure malls in Bergen County stay closed on 
    Sundays. 
8. Not that this is a bad thing, but family planning funds don't pay for 
    abortions. 
9. If you are against abortion, consider this: family planning services 
    prevented an estimated 19,000 abortions last year. 
10. Family planning centers provide pre-natal care.

Gee-- that seems like  96 million dollars worth of reasons and 204,000 people served worth of reasons to overturn this veto.  I wish someone's mother would write a letter to their elected official son telling him to "be a good boy" and vote for family planning. 

(Sources: The Record, NJ Budget, Planned Parenthood)

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

A Chance to Fund Family Planning in NJ through an Override Vote

Women's Equality Day was used to announce NJ Democrats' intention to overturn Governor Christie's veto of $7.5 million in family funding for New Jersey Citizens.

The vote will take place in the Senate on September 20, 2010. If the override vote in the Senate passes, the Assembly will  vote on Sept. 30.

Two-thirds of the lawmakers in both houses are needed to override the veto.  For the Senate, will we need 27 votes and in the Assembly we will need 54.  When the bill originally passed the house on June 30, 30 out of 40 Senators voted in favor of the bill, enough to support a veto override.  Republican leadership however is stating that they will not vote to override the veto of a Governor from their own party.

Now is the time to put pressure on our legislature. We have until September 20, 2010 ensure that women in NJ maintain access to comprehensive reproductive health care.

http://www.ppaction.org/campaign/WHM_PPANJ_overridetheveto

Not sure why this bill is important? Check out my past blog post:

http://reproductivejusticenj.blogspot.com/2010/07/family-planning-bill-denies-nj-citizens.html

Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice Highlights Racism (and Sexism) of Glenn Beck Rally

This past week I was busy celebrating my 33rd birthday. (Thanks to all of you who commented on my blog!).

Yet, the world did not take a break from attempting to role back civil and women's rights.  We have all heard about the Glen Beck rally.  Have we heard the analysis of how this was particularly harmful of black women's reproductive rights?

Since I didn't have time to write something up, Check out this great blog article below.

http://www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/2010/08/30/glenn-beck-alveda-king-reproductive-rights

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

No More Dead Women on my Bookshelf


I have taken to reading mysteries this summer. I chose this genre because I wanted intrigue, suspense, plot twists and nail biting.

Instead, I have ended up with dead women, sexual assault, misogyny. It seems to me that violence against women is used in lieu of plot or character development.

Violence against women is committed in the real world, to real people daily... and our society virtually ignores this issue. In fact, most “beatings” that women receive from abusers would only qualify as misdemeanor assault in a court of law. Many of you probably know the statistics, but let me refresh your memory:

1 in 4 women will be abused by a partner in her lifetime. (American Medical Association)

In 92% of all intimate partner DV incidents, the crimes are committed by men against women. (Violence Against Women, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice, January 1994).

30% of women killed in the U.S. die at the hands of a husband or boyfriend. (Uniform Crime Report of the FBI)

This is a reproductive justice issue because the ability to live and love free from fear is a central right. Additionally, in relationships where domestic violence is present women are not able to control their reproductive lives, and violence increases when a woman becomes pregnant. This problem is all too real, and in real life, detectives are not assigned to research domestic violence cases, domestic violence is not covered adequately or with enough sensitivity in the news, and victims are blamed.

Yet... we read about brutalized women for pleasure. My first mystery of the summer, _Through the Heart_ featured a woman who falls in love quickly with a man who has all of the warning signs of being an abuser: sweeps her off of her feet, controls what she wears and where she shops, "frees" her financially by paying all her debts, and he asks her to cut off her hair to prove that she loves him. This woman is murdered, and of course the boyfriend is a suspect. It turns out her mother, who has also been abusing her for the duration of  her life is the culprit. Many women who are in a relationship with an abuser were abused as children. What the plot ignores is if the main character had not been killed by her mother, there was a very strong likelihood that she would have been killed by her new abuser.

The next, a very popular book _Girl with the Dragon Tattoo_, features a who-done-it plot, a historical mystery, and corporate scandal. I will take the corporate scandal and the historical mystery but please leave the raped, mutilated, burned women behind. In addition, one of the main characters, Lisbeth Salander clearly suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder and is brutally victimized in the story.

I don’t even remember the title of the third book, but the plot was so similar I just had to put it down. Each time I opened a new book I convinced myself that it would contain an original idea, but no. I should have just watched Law and Order SVU.  Some would interpret this analysis as me being an over-sensitive feminist who can’t “relax” but violence against women is not entertainment.

I refuse to be entertained by tales of intrigue about women being killed while there are real women living as prisoners in their own homes and our culture at large and societal institutions do little to address the issue. To redress this, the authors should give portions of  their proceeds to domestic violence and rape crisis agencies that are woefully under-funded. Oddly, this is the exact penance that Lisbeth requires of one of her abusers in _The Girl with a Dragon Tattoo_.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

New Jersians do their Organizing in Diners.



Diners are quintessintial New Jersey.  Open 24 hours with vast menus as big as bibles. The ability to eat anything from breakfast to seafood at any time of the day.  Some of them even serve alchol.


The Tic Toc Diner on Route 3 was the location of our first Roe v. Wade Anniverserary Celebration Committee Meeting.  There were 6 of us present, three from the New Jersey Relegious Colalition for Reproductive Choice and three from the fledgling New Jersey Abortion Access Fund.


There are a few things you should know about this group:


* We are a lot of fun!  Most people hold a stereotype of feminists and abortion rights activists as angry, man-hating, barren women...NOT TRUE!  This was a wonderful time with a group of great women.


*Three of us are named "Carol." This tells you something about the age of the women in the group. Most of the women I know in the reproductive rights and reproductive justice movements no longer have functioning uteruses.. meaning, they are past the age where they would be reproducing. But they fight this fight because they remeber a time women abotion wasn't legal, and because they understand that even today, quality reprodictive health care is out of reach for many. 


* We are serious.  I am more than confident that this small group of women will pull off a major event!


Our tentative date is January 22, a Saturday and the actual anniversary of Roe V. Wade. We are in the process of figuring out what the playoff (football) schedule will be so as not to interfere with people's game watching extravaganzas.  We are also trying to identify key note speakers, as well as reproducitive justice champions to give awards to.  Please post your ideas and thoughts, and save the weekend of January 22, for either a Saturday or Sunday late afternoon/early evening celebration in honor of Roe V. Wade, one piece of the reproductive justice puzzle!

Monday, August 9, 2010

Marriage Equality and Reproductive Justice: Untangling the Knots

On August 4, 2010 Proposition 8 was declared unconstitutional in California because it violates citizen's Due Process and Equal Protection rights. A very good friend of mine with a JD also pointed out that they are discovering facts in this case, not arguing legal theory, which makes the decision much more likely to stick.


The decision to overturn Proposition 8 is a victory for same sex couples and a move towards equality for lgbt people. This ruling also directly relates to the reproductive justice movement.  One of my famous quotes is: "all oppresions are linked."  Oppression is like a knotted ball of yarn with many loose ends. It doesn't matter where you start to untangle it, the important thing is that you begin.


The ruling on proposition 8 says a number of things that are interesting to both the feminist and the gay/trans rights movements.


1. That marriage is about MORE than sex and procreation.
2. That lesbian and gay couples HAVE been discriminated against by their right to marriage being denied.
3. That lesbian and gay parents are equally as capable as heterosexual parents, coupled or otherwise, to raise children.
3. Marriage is not about gender, but about a relationship between equals.  Gender no longer defines roles in a marriage.


Proponents of Proposition 8 believe that the state has the duty to regulate marriage, sex, and procreation. I quote directly below from the court document.  



"Proponents’ procreation argument, distilled to its
 essence, is as follows: the state has an interest in encouraging
 sexual activity between people of the opposite sex to occur in 
stable marriages because such sexual activity may lead to pregnancy
 and children, and the state has an interest in encouraging parents
 to raise children in stable households. Tr 3050:17-3051:10. The
 state therefore, the argument goes, has an interest in encouraging
 all opposite-sex sexual activity, whether responsible or
 irresponsible, procreative or otherwise, to occur within a stable 
marriage, as this encourages the development of a social norm that 
opposite-sex sexual activity should occur within marriage. Tr
3053:10-2


The court is acknowledging that gender is not as useful as it once was, pretty radical stuff indeed! As gender defines less of our legal and societal roles, its importance will fade and equality will rise. I believe that gender is a social construct and laws have been developed around this construct-- perhaps its usefulness has finally faded. At least in California legal precedent on marriage it has... for the time being.


Those defending proposition 8 state openly that it is about controlling the family and reproduction.  The court however, recognizes that marriage is about much more than providing couples the right to procreate. In fact, the court believes that this is a limited view of marriage that does not fully articulate the bond between couples who choose to commit to spending the rest of their lives together. Ironically the those who are defending marriage are at the same time, lessening its value. 
The court has ruled:


Never has the state inquired into procreative capacity or 
intent before issuing a marriage license; indeed, a marriage 
license is more than a license to have procreative sexual
 intercourse. FF 21. “[I]t would demean a married couple were it
 to be said marriage is simply about the right to have sexual
intercourse.” Lawrence, 539 US at 567. 
The court has also stated that marriage, in effect, is a post-gendered institution.  Gender at one time was important in a marriage because work was divided based on gender.  Today, marriage is about a partnership between equals, however the couple decides to divide the daily tasks of living, and carry out the marital contract. 



The evidence at trial shows that marriage in the United 
States traditionally has not been open to same-sex couples. The
 evidence suggests many reasons for this tradition of exclusion,
including gender roles mandated through coverture, FF 26-27, social 
disapproval of same-sex relationships, FF 74, and the reality that the vast majority of people are heterosexual and have had no reason
to challenge the restriction, FF 43. 
...
Today, gender is not
 relevant to the state in determining spouses’ obligations to each
 other and to their dependents. Relative gender composition aside,
 same-sex couples are situated identically to opposite-sex couples 
in terms of their ability to perform the rights and obligations of
 marriage under California law. FF 48. Gender no longer forms an 
essential part of marriage; marriage under law is a union of
 equals.
This ruling is important, but not the final say in the battle for marriage equality.  It leaves excellent legal precedent for the seperation of sex and gender, and recognizes, for the first time, that marriage is a union of equals.  This ruling also states that marraige is about more than reproduction, a victory for reproductive justice advocates. However interesting, legal theory does not give equality to the countless couples waiting to have their love and lives fully recognized.