As access to abortion and contraception are curtailed across much of the U.S., Professor Lina-Maria Murillo explains that today’s reproductive rights debates are part of a much longer story. Her research in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands show how race and power have always influenced who can get care and who cannot. She connects how earlier attempts to control women’s bodies still shape current laws and discussions, and she shares what history can teach us about defending reproductive freedom now.
For more on this topic:
Check out Murillo’s book, Fighting for Control: Power, Reproductive Care, and Race in the US-Mexico Borderlands
Read her perspective in the Washington Post: Before Roe v. Wade, U.S. residents sought safer abortions in Mexico
Read her SSN brief: Reproductive Freedom along the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands
The number of people held in immigration detention centers in the U.S. has exploded in recent years, reaching record highs under multiple administrations. And thanks to the Republican-led budget bill that became law in July, the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency has seen a major influx of federal funding, further fueling the expansion of detentions. Professor Nancy Hiemstra explains how detention became a multi-billion-dollar industry, breaking down who profits, who pays, and how communities across the country, not just along the border, have become tied to detention economies.
For more on this topic:
Check out Hiemstra’s book with co-author Deirdre Conlon, Immigration Detention Inc.: The Big Business of Locking up Migrants
Read the op-ed they co-authored in Newsweek: People Will Die at Alligator Alcatraz
Read their SSN brief: How Expanded Migrant Detention Drives Profiteering and Leads to Tougher Immigration Policies