Tue, Nov 8, 2022

12 PM – 1 PM EST (GMT-5)

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The history of abortion in the United States has been at the center of both supreme court cases establishing legality.

In 1973, Justice Blackmun delivered the opinion of the court in Roe v. Wade. He asserted that in order to resolve the issue of legality of abortion "free of emotion and predilection" his opinion emphasizes the "medical and medical-legal history and what that history reveals about man's attitudes towards the abortion procedure over the centuries."

Thus, in 2022, when Justice Alito  wrote the opinion for Dobbs vs. Jackson Women's Health organization, overturning Roe v. Wade, he put history of abortion in the United States at the center of his argument: "The court finds that the right to abortion is not deeply rooted in the Nation's history and tradition."

In this panel, historians Renée Sentilles, Noel Voltz, and Aviva Rothman, will address the overall history of abortion and contraception in America, how women in marginalized groups experience and shape that history, and how science has played out in the American court.
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Speakers

Ren├®e Sentilles's profile photo

Ren├®e Sentilles

Henry Eldridge Bourne Professor of History and co-director of the Women and Gender Studies Program

College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History

Noël Voltz's profile photo

Noël Voltz

Assistant Professor

College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History

Aviva Rothman's profile photo

Aviva Rothman

Associate Professor

College of Arts and Sciences, Department of History

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