Search
Program Calendar
Browse By Day
Browse By Time
Browse By Person
Browse By Session Type
Personal Schedule
Sign In
Access for All
Exhibit Hall
Hotels
WiFi
Search Tips
Session Submission Type: Paper Session (90 minute)
In the wake of Dobbs, the legal terrain of reproduction is rapidly shifting, extending beyond abortion to include surveillance of birth, miscarriage, medication access, and mobility across state borders. This session invites analyses of how legal regimes shape reproduction, criminalization, and bodily autonomy, particularly for marginalized populations.
Sociology of Law Section / Reproductive Governance After Dobbs: Rights, Borders, and Criminalization
“Everything Everywhere All At Once”: The Knowledge Economy of Abortion Rights Post-Dobbs - Hataipreuk Dawy Rkasnuam, University of Southern California
Interpreting Abortion Law in Health Care Practice: Legal Consciousness Among Prenatal Genetic Counselors Post-Dobbs - Maya Manian, University of California-San Francisco
Whose Future, Whose Rights? Intersectional Threat and Support for Restricting Legal Abortion Post-Dobbs - Kevin M. Drakulich, Northeastern University; Ciela Capage, Northeastern University
Anti-Abortion Efforts in the post-Dobbs Era: Crisis Pregnancy Centers and Reproductive Governance in Texas and California - Carly Danielle Young, The University of Texas at Austin
Transnational Legal Effects of Dobbs v. Jackson: Case Studies from Kenya and Nigeria - Miriam Gleckman-Krut, Harvard University; Mandivavarira Mudarikwa, Amnesty International