scholarly journals ART with PGD: Risky heredity and stratified reproduction

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 48-55
Author(s):  
Ilana Löwy
2021 ◽  
Vol 272 ◽  
pp. 113705
Author(s):  
Brooke V. Jespersen ◽  
Vanessa M. Hildebrand ◽  
Jill E. Korbin ◽  
James C. Spilsbury

Author(s):  
Clare Wenham

Feminist Global Health Security highlights the ways in which women are disadvantaged by global health security policy, through engagement with feminist concepts of visibility; social and stratified reproduction; intersectionality; and structural violence. The book argues that an approach focused on short-term response efforts to health emergencies fails to consider the differential impacts of outbreaks on women. This feminist critique focuses on the policy response to the Zika outbreak, which centred on limiting the spread of the vector through civic participation and asking women to defer pregnancy, actions that are inherently gendered and reveal a distinct lack of consideration of the everyday lives of women. The book argues that because global health security lacks a substantive feminist engagement, policies created to manage an outbreak of disease focus on protecting economies and state security and disproportionately fail to protect women. This state-based structure of global health security provides the fault-line for global health security and women. Women are both differentially infected and affected by epidemics and, the book argues: it was no coincidence that poor, black women living in low quality housing were most affected by the Zika outbreak. More broadly, it poses the question: What would global health policy look like if it were to take gender seriously, and how would this impact global disease control sustainability?


Author(s):  
Miranda R. Waggoner

This chapter examines how the pre-pregnancy care model has influenced public health promotion, illustrated through the “Show Your Love” campaign that was created by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in 2013. This chapter reveals how the campaign’s message drew on and promoted gendered and racialized tropes in its goal of promoting pre-maternal love for future babies and, in so doing, further stratified reproduction. Discussion in this chapter highlights the social control aspects of public health and how the power of this particular messaging potentially reframes practices of “intensive mothering” into an ethic of “anticipatory motherhood.”


Author(s):  
Megan Reid ◽  
Danielle Dirks ◽  
Elyshia Aseltine

2013 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 445-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harriet M. Phinney ◽  
Khuat Thu Hong ◽  
Vu Thi Thanh Nhan ◽  
Nguyen Thi Phuong Thao ◽  
Jennifer S. Hirsch

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