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Related: About this forumWhat We Must Learn From Latin America in a Post-Roe World
What We Must Learn From Latin America in a Post-Roe World
8/18/2022 by Paula Avila-Guillen and Kelly Baden
The U.S. is only beginning to scratch the surface of the kinds of horrors that banning abortion will beget. Our neighbors in Latin America have understood this reality for years.
Women at a Green Wave protest in Argentina in 2019. (Gisela Curioni / Wikimedia Commons)
The reversal of Roe v. Wade has sent shock waves through the United States and beyond. Political movements are not contained by geographic borders and now, neither is access to abortion. Our ability to get the abortion care we need is now undeniably a transnational issue, and so, too, is our movement to secure abortion rights. We cannot afford to ignore the wins and the lessons learned from our neighbors and friends around the globe as we embark on the long road ahead to rebuild power and restore our right to abortion in the U.S. Not even two months after the Supreme Courts disastrous blow to our health, rights and gender equity, abortion is already banned outright in 10 states. And opponents of abortion are not content to stop there. Bills percolating or promised in state legislatures offer up cash bounties for turning abortion patients in, callously disregard nonviable pregnancies that endanger our lives, and threaten companies who seek to support their employees who may need abortion care. They even consider blocking pregnant people from traveling across state lines to access abortion care and investigating miscarriages.
. . . .
While we are only just beginning to scratch the surface of the kinds of horrors that banning abortion will beget in the U.S., our neighbors in Latin America have understood this reality for years. This is a region where there is a total abortion ban in El Salvador, where access to emergency contraception is illegal in Honduras, and where IVF was illegal for over a decade in Costa Rica. Weve seen firsthand that the outcome of abortion bans is to turn any pregnant person into a suspected criminal; abortion bans send women to prison for suspected abortions, tearing families and communities apart, and lead to bans on emergency contraception like in Honduras.
. . . . .
In 2020, Argentina ushered in the Green Wave, a rally cry to ensure and expand access to legal abortion and reproductive healthcare that has gained traction in a region known for its religious influence over politics and social beliefs. Their success depended in part on linking abortion to broader gender-based movements and centering public health rather than individual rights. On the heels of Argentinas victory, Mexico and Colombia have decriminalized abortion, too. Now, the Green Wave is staking claim in the U.S. and infusing a global energy into an American movement long stymied by partisan politics. Our collective history, throughout the Americas and the world, tells us abortion has always existed and it always will. Communities will find ways to take care of themselves and each other, even when laws wont protect us. Abortion care in a post-Roe U.S. may involve securing pills online or through medical tourism. But tragically, it will also look like increased criminalization of people who can become pregnant and the further policing of our bodies, especially those already under intense scrutiny due to our countrys deep racism.
The Green Wave used dedicated organizing, tailored to individual communities and regions, coupled with a culture change strategy that meets people where they are and a relentless commitment to abortion as healthcare and healthcare as a human right to create change. Our call for continued global conversations on abortion can move us beyond a U.S.-centric framework and into a global movement for change. Lets welcome the Green Wave to America with open arms.
https://msmagazine.com/2022/08/18/post-roe-latin-america-abortion-green-wave/
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