In this week’s Invisibilia, could a rebrand of a familiar pill open up new ways to control fertility in post-Rohe America?
In this episode:
learn more:
Leslie J. Regan, “The Late-Late Pill Study That Made Abortion a Crime”, NPR’s Throughline, “Before Roe: The Physicians’ Crusade”, Michelle Goodwin, “The Racist History of Abortion and Midwifery Bans” “Mixed Methods Study Exploring Women’s Perceptions of Terminology” The Context of Fertility and Menstrual Regulation in Ivory Coast and Nigeria” by Elizabeth Grace Sheehy Omoluabi, Funmilola M. Olaolorun, Rocine Mosso, Fiakle Bazier, and Caroline Moreau , Suzanne O. Bell “Out-of-Clinic and Self-Managed Abortion in Bangladesh: Menstrual Regulation Provider Perspectives” by Bonnie Krzamel, Erin Pearson, Sarah Tilford, and Samantha Hearst, Dipika Paul, Fahima Akhtar, Jay Silverman, and Sarah Avar. Bach, “The Legal Limits of Menstrual Regulation” by Samantha Gogol Rindt “Put Abortion Pills in People’s Hands” by Joanna Erdmann (opinion) Why some women want ‘period delay drugs’ and how Bangladesh made abortion safer By Patrick Adams (opinion)
Special thanks to the following musicians: