Against the Current, No. 188, May/June 2017
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What Kind of Opposition?
— The Editors -
Learn from Malcolm X
— Malik Miah -
Trump and the Middle East
— David Finkel -
Regulation -- Who Needs It?
— Dianne Feeley - Rasmea Odeh Accepts Plea Agreement
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What is Reproductive Justice?
— Angi Becker Stevens - A Note on Terms
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Latin America: A Conservative Restoration?
— Marc Becker -
Science for the People with the EZLN
— John Vandermeer and Ivette Perfecto -
The Russian Revolution and Workers Democracy
— Suzi Weissman -
Baba Jan, Pakistani Prisoner
— Farooq Tariq -
Time has long passed that you could rob the fattest bank in america
— Kim D. Hunter - Reviews
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Franz Kafka: In His Times and Ours
— Alan Wald -
C.L.R. James and His Times
— Anthony Bogues -
E.P. Thompson's Socialist Humanism
— Dan Johnson -
Detroit Radicals' Odyssey
— Bill V. Mullen -
Race and the Real California
— Seonghee Lim -
Market Uber Alles
— Kim D. Hunter -
Leonard Weinglass in History
— Matthew Clark - In Memoriam
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Reflections on Tom Hayden
— Howard Brick -
Seymour Kramer (1946-2017)
— Patrick M. Quinn -
Remembering a Friend
— Mike Davis -
Regina Pyrko McNulty (1923-2016)
— Dianne Feeley
THE WOMEN’s MOVEMENT of the ’60s and ’70s had two different strategies around reproductive issues:
• The pro-choice movement focused on the legal battle of ending restrictions on abortion and birth control, framing these rights as a woman’s choice.
• The left of the women’s movement maintained that women’s reproductive issues didn’t stop with legalization but raised interrelated reproductive issues: access to birth control, “free abortion on demand,” opposition to forced sterilization and the right to have and raise children with the necessary social supports.
For socialist women a broader reproductive rights approach was essential since historically women’s access to health care has been based on class differences. Poor women — particularly women of color — need social support, not just formal legal rights.
Reproductive justice is a multi-issue and base-building strategy developed by women of color in the 1990s. It views reproductive rights as part of a human rights agenda. See https://www.trustblackwomen.org/our-work/what-is-reproductive-justice/9-what-is-reproductive-justice and http://www.protectchoice.org/section.php?id=28.
May-June 2017, ATC 188