Reproductive Rights Conference Glasgow June 2022: REMOTE ATTENDANCE
Date and time
Location
Online event
'Whose choice, whose rights? Global-historical and intersectional approaches to the emergence of reproductive rights after 1945'
About this event
REGISTRATION FOR REMOTE ATTENDANCE
Any programme updates and news will be emailed to you on the address you have provided upon registration.
PROGRAMME
DAY 1 – 9 June
8.45-9.15: Registration and Welcome
9.15-10.45: PANEL 1
Contraception and family planning services (mixed remote/campus panel)
Aprajita Sarcar, Centre de Sciences Humaines New Delhi : ‘The mythical family within a triangle: How a family planning campaign created South Asian mass communication channels as we know them today’
Cécile Thomé, National Institute for Demographic Studies France & EHESS: ‘The changing role of sexuality in the emergence and evolution of reproductive rights in France (1960s-2010s)’
Ivana Dobrivojevic Tomic, Institute of Contemporary History Belgrade: ‘Reproductive Behaviour and Family Planning in Socialist Yugoslavia (1945 – 1991)’
Samantha Kohl Grey, University of Queensland: ‘Potent Males and Patent Females: Sterility investigations, male infertility, and assistive reproductive technology in Australia’
11.00-12.15: PANEL 2
Reproductive rights at the UN and the role of NGOs (mixed remote/campus panel)
Nicole Bourbonnais, Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies Geneva: ’Feminists in the System: Reproductive Rights Activism from the Inside Out’
Chiara Bonfiglioli, University College Cork: ‘”Updating Malthus’ population theory is out of the question today”: Nevenka Petrić, IPPF-Europe, and the Yugoslav Council for Family Planning’
Ayodele Mathew Oluwaseun, University of Ibadan & University of Leipzig: ‘Reassessing Non-governmental Organisations Advocacy for Reproductive Health and Rights in Southwestern Nigeria, 1980 – 2000’
12.30-1.00: Graphic novel presentation by project artist Catherine MacRobbie
1.00-2.00: LUNCH
2.00-3.30: PANEL 3
Feminism and women’s health movements (mixed remote/campus panel)
Isabel Heinemann, Münster University: ‘Women’s Reproductive Rights across the Iron Curtain? Health Feminism in the two German States, 1970s-90s’
Anna Vittinghoff, University of Edinburgh: ‘Reproductive politics in post-war Japan: How feminists and disability activists challenged eugenics and changed the discourse on reproduction, 1970s-90s’
Whitney Wood, Vancouver Island University: ‘Settler-Colonialism and Choice in Childbirth, 1970-90’
Hannah Yoken, University of Glasgow: ‘The Transnational Circulation of Feminist Reproductive Knowledge among Grassroots Activists: The Nordic New Women’s Movements of the 1970s–80s’
3.45-5.00: PANEL 4
Reproductive justice in comparative-historical perspective (mixed remote/campus panel)
Christabelle Sethna, University of Ottawa: ‘Romancing the Foetus: Foetal Rights and Reproductive Rights in Canada, 1967-1969’
Yuliya Hilevych, University of Groningen: ‘Infertility awareness in post-war Britain and Ukraine’
Cara Delay, College of Charleston: ‘”A Monster in God’s Eyes”: Narratives of contraception and abortion in Ireland, 1980-2018’
5.15-6.15 SPECIAL EVENT: 'The global ramifications of the attacks on abortion rights in the US’: Catherine Burns in conversation with Tlaleng Mokofeng, UN Human Rights Council Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health
7.00: Dinner for network members
DAY 2 – 10 June
9.00-10.30: PANEL 5
The power in our hands: Abortion practices and knowledge in Cold War Europe (remote panel)
Azzura Tafuro Université Libre de Bruxelles: ‘With Karman, against Karman: The Italian trip of Harvey Karman between science and political contestation’
Agata Ignacuik, University of Granada, ‘Counter-technologies of care: Vacuum aspiration in Poland (1960s-80s)’
Bibia Pavard, Paris Panthéon-Assas, ‘The “Karman method” between China and California: realities and imaginaries of the vacuum abortion method in 1970s France’
Maria Mundi, University of Granada, ‘The science of the “Karman method” in Spain’
10.45-12: KEYNOTE TALK: Catherine Burns, University of Witwatersrand, ‘ “Without fear, without pain": Contesting control over contraception, pregnancy and birth from South Africa to the world’
12.00-1.00: Lunch
1.00-2.30: PANEL 6
Medical practitioners, science and technology (mixed remote/campus panel)
Atina Krajewska, University of Birmingham: ‘Reproductive Rights in Transitional Societies: The Role of the Medical Profession in Developing Abortion Law in Socialist Poland’
Marta Liliana Espinosa, Duke University: ‘Uncovering the history of contraceptive trials and the creation of the birth control pill in Mexico, 1950s-60s’
Kalindy Bolivar, Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales Ecuador: ‘Discourses and biomedical practices about maternity and childbirth in the city of Quito, 1950-1973’
Amanuel Isak Tewolde, University of Johannesburg, ‘Abortion and women’s rights in Eritrea: state and medical responses, 1970s to the present’
2.45-4.15: PANEL 7
Religion, activism and reproductive rights (mixed remote/campus panel)
Natalia Pomian, University of Warsaw: ‘“It has this ethical approach and it’s consistent with the Church teachings”: Catholicism and infertility treatment in Poland’
Roseanna Webster, European University Institute: ‘From the Vatican to London: Reproductive Justice in Spain from the 1950s to 1980s’
Natalie Gasparowicz, Duke University: ‘“Paternidad Responsable” in Mexico and Latin America: Catholics, Birth Control, and Pope John Paul II’
Anna Sidorevich, Sciences Po Paris: ‘“Inhumane torture” and “barbaric operation”: abortion in Leningrad feminists’ samizdat and tamizdat publications (1979-1982)’
4.30-6.00: Closing discussion and reception for all attendants