I know, with certainty, that my father would not murder me.
Author: Cynthia Greenlee
On Darrin Manning, and Reproductive Justice for Young Men of Color
When 16-year-old Darrin Manning left basketball practice, he surely did not imagine that the trip home would jeopardize his reproductive future.
An Abortion Story Both Radical and Ordinary
“From my perspective, what is amazing about this story is that the abortion is not the beginning or end of the story—the way we usually tell abortion stories.”
Collective Memory Runs Deep: A Southern Reflection on the Voting Rights Act Decision
Undoubtedly, many black South Carolinians question whether they’re welcome at the polls.
T.R.M. Howard: Civil Rights Rabble-Rouser, Abortion Provider
This remarkable image reportedly depicts preparations for one of the first legal abortions in Illinois.
For my mother: A day without cancer
When I found a lump in my breast several years ago, I couldn’t bear to tell my mother.
The Road to Roe: Paved with Bodies of Women of Color and the Legal Activism of African American
I frequently hear variations on these themes: “abortion is a white feminist thing,” “black people are against abortion,” or “abortion is black genocide.”