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What We Missed

An update to last week’s news on Prop 8 — it looks like I was right to not hold my breath; gay and lesbian couples will have to wait until the end of the year for oral arguments as the appeals court imposed an emergency stay on Judge Walker’s strike-down of the legislation.

A new study shows that teens who are in a committed, sexual relationship don’t suffer academically or in other ways.

A new study finding that husbands are more likely to cheat if they earn less than their wives lends an opportunity to tell women it’s “safest” to make the same amount of dough or less than your man. So get underachievin’, ladies!

Check out the latest on Feministing Campus on being a low-income student activist.

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For your bookshelf: Before Roe v. Wade

Thanks to my roving male feminist spy (that’d be my dad) for the heads up about this new book about the shaping of the discourse about abortion in the years leading up to 1973’s landmark ruling in Roe v. Wade. The book, Before Roe v. Wade: Voices that Shaped the Abortion Debate Before the Supreme Court’s Ruling, was written by Pulitzer Prize winner Linda Greenhouse and Yale Law professor Reva Siegel, and it is currently out in hardcover.

The book relies heavily on primary sources, offering a glimpse into the lives and minds of the people who were talking about abortion and agitating for abortion rights in the decade before Roe. Greenhouse and Siegal collected letters, educational pamphlets, affidavits and hundreds of other documents to reconstruct the landscape of the American cultural and legal discussion around abortion in the 1960s and early 1970s.

According the Yale Law Report, the book contains reprints of everything from 60s-era Women’s Lib speeches and sex-ed pamphlets to “instructions circulated to thousands of women by The Society for Human Abortion about how to get an abortion in Japan.”

Remembering what the American cultural and legal landscape looked like before abortion is a powerful way to remind ourselves why it’s so important to protect and expand the rights we have won. If you’re interested in reading about life in America pre-Roe, I highly recommend The Girls Who Went Away: A Hidden History of the Girls Who Surrendered Children for Adoption in the Years BeforeRoe v. Wade and When Abortion Was a Crime: Women, Medicine and Law in the United States, 1867-1973.

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Quick Hit: Latin America Ahead of U.S. on Same-Sex Marriage

Amidst all the hateful hype surrounding Prop 8 in CA, it can be easy to lose perspective on the same sex marriage “debate” and forget that it’s actually quite a straightforward issue, a matter of common sense and a basic human right. An opinion piece in today’s LA Times gives us a much-needed reminder of this, providing some perspective with the bold headline “Latin America ahead of U.S. on same-sex marriage.”

The article is definitely worth a read. It points out that countries like Mexico and Argentina have been able to recognize “that religion and civil law have different roles to perform in marriage, something absent in the debate in the U.S.” and highlights some of the most recent and significant legal achievements won for LGBTQI rights.

Earlier this week, as part of the Latina Week of Action for Reproductive Justice, I wrote about this strategic work by feminists in Latin America to ensure the separation of church and state. This article expands on that trend and highlights some of the great strides Latin America has made toward ending discrimination against queer folks. Hopefully other regions of the world- including the U.S.- will get the memo soon.

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All politics should be this cool

I have a big old lady brain crush on Elizabeth Warren, Harvard Law professor and Chair of the Federal Oversight Panel. And I like rap. And I love ponies. Which is why I can not get enough of this video.

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Action Steps YOU Can Take to Improve Trans Folks’ Access to Healthcare

We’ve written a lot about the importance of ensuring access to health services for trans folk, and of the discrimination they often face when trying to access said services. And a few weeks ago, a new study by youth advocate Neha Sood was released on the health hurdles transgender women and men, and gender non-conforming people, face in Asia.

Given the information presented in that report, it seems as good a time as any to ask ourselves, as feminists, as trans and cis gender people, as gender non-conforming people, as SRRH advocates, and as allies in a movement for better access to health and rights for all, what can I do about this systematic denial of healthcare to an entire community of people? How can I help ensure access to health services for transgender men and women, in Asia and around the world?

As Sood points out, “Urgent as well as long-term sustainable action needs to be taken in order to protect, promote and fulfil transgender people’s rights, as well as empower them to access these.” She’s worked with IWHC to produce a list of actions that can be taken by members of the general public (that’s most of us!), state governments, and donor agencies, to help address some of the access problems she outlines in the original report. A few samples of action steps she recommend folks like me and you take right now:

“Build understanding on gender, sexualities, sexual and reproductive rights and the links with all human rights, including on transgender issues, and educate society on the same. This would include dispensing with binary thinking about gender, as well as sexual hierarchies.”

“Ensure that our own organizations, networks and partnerships have affirmative and non-discriminative policies, including for transgender women and men and gender non-conforming people.”

Click here for the whole list, and pass it on to anyone you think has the power to change our reality- that is, everyone you know!

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