Review:
"This is a much-needed, long overdue effort to fill the gap in what we know about Native American women's health and their access to reproductive justice more broadly."--Jeanne Flavin "author of Our Bodies, Our Crimes: Policing Women's Reproduction in America "
"Gurr does not present Native women as theorists about these policies. She looks to the promising ways forward offered by Native reproductive justice organizers, while not romanticizing the impact this work has had on communities overall."--Women's Review of Books
"In Gurr's analysis we hear the voices of Lakota women, we see the structural limitations and oppressions that contribute to a system of reproductive injustice, and we are asked to envision new pathways for activism. She effectively calls on scholars, activists, legislators, and tribal leaders to do more to move Native women's experiences to the center of conversations about health, wellness, justice, and citizenship in America."--Women and Social Movements
"Gurr's book is a remarkable tour de force that presents, in elegantly lyrical style, a scathing analysis of the status of Native American women when the government simultaneously claims their bodies and their sexuality, while erecting immutable barriers of exclusion through legal and political subordination."--Loretta Ross "co-founder of the SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective "
About the Author:
Barbara Gurr is an assistant professor in residence in the Department of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at the University of Connecticut at Storrs, USA.
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