Feminists for Life
'Feminists for Life:' A built-in contradiction?
by Eleanor J. Bader, RH Reality Check
December 14, 2010 - 11:20pm (Print)
Many scholars and activists argue that women's liberation rests on a foundation of full reproductive options. Feminists For Life believes the opposite, arguing that being "prolife" (that is, anti-abortion) is inextricably linked to female empowerment.
Why We Must (Re)claim Feminist History
February 25, 2009 - 8:00am (Print)
Eye-Poppingly Bad Bills From Texas
by Amanda Marcotte, RH Reality Check
December 1, 2008 - 10:14am (Print)
Follow Amanda Marcotte on Twitter, @amandamarcotte
Washington Post Says Year of the Woman? It May Finally Be True
by Amie Newman
October 24, 2008 - 3:46pm (Print)
It's the Year of the Woman! And that means it's time to examine how support for or opposition to legal abortion access does or doesn't signal a "real feminist."
Feminists for Life's Imaginary World
by Amanda Marcotte, RH Reality Check
September 10, 2008 - 7:00am (Print)
Follow Amanda Marcotte on Twitter, @amandamarcotte
Sarah Palin: A Fatally Flawed Feminist
September 2, 2008 - 8:14am (Print)
Unsafe Abortion as Human Rights Abuse
by Amie Newman
December 8, 2006 - 7:00am (Print)
Despite the new wave of "feminist" anti-abortion crusaders like Feminists for Life that spin legal abortion in this country as unsafe or harmful to women, the facts tell a very different story. As Tyler LePard and Katie Porter blogged last month, The British Journal, The Lancet, released a series of articles on sexual and reproductive health, coordinated by the World Health Organization. The study on unsafe abortion in developing nations called it a "silent pandemic" that is an "urgent public health and human rights imperative." Those are some pretty strong words - as well they should be.
Almost 70,000 women die every year (97% of them in developing nations) from unsafe and illegal abortion but millions more suffer complications such as hemorrhaging and infection. Many of those complications result in permanent damage for the women.
When are we, as a global community, going to treat this as a burning human rights issue and not just a political one?

