Episode 16: Overcoming Injustice: Why Women's Constitutional Citizenship Still Matters.

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Episode 16: Overcoming Injustice: Why Women's Constitutional Citizenship Still Matters.

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Producer

Holly Baker

Description

In 2020, the Africana Studies Program at the University of Central Florida hosted the second annual Dr. John T. Washington Lecture Series benefiting scholarships for Africana Studies Minors.

Professor Michele Bratcher Goodwin, Chancellor’s Professor of Law at the University of California-Irvine School of Law presented on the topic, Overcoming Injustice: Why Women's Constitutional Citizenship Still Matters.

Professor Goodwin is the founder and director of the Center for Biotechnology and Global Health Policy and its Reproductive Justice Initiative.

Jeffrey Daglaris spoke to Michele Goodwin about her presentation and her work.

Narrator

Holly Baker

Interviewer

Jeffrey Daglaris

Interviewee

Michele Bratcher Goodwin

Date Created

2020

Keywords

Africana Studies Program, Dr. John T. Washington Lecture Series, Michele Bratcher Goodwin, Chancellor’s Professor of Law at the University of California-Irvine School of Law, Center for Biotechnology, Global Health Policy, Reproductive Justice Initiative, Reproductive Rights, Human rights, Civil Rights, race, Eugenics, University of Minnesota, State Fair, Law, Medicine, Constitutional Law, Organ transplant policy, Slavery, Sojourner Truth, Buck v. Bell, 1927, Virginia, Forced Sterilization, Carrie Buck, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Nazis, U.S. Supreme Court, World War II, Skinner v. Oklahoma, Mississippi, appendectomy, Black Women, Pregnancy, Biology, History, Law, Jim Crow South, Voting Rights, Ebola, Quarantine, Ellis Island, Angel Island, Coronavirus, Abstinence, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Infant Mortality, Bosnia, Maternal Health, Kenya, Poverty, Abortion, Syphilis, CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Contraception, Roe v. Wade, Richard Nixon, George H. W. Bush, Martin Luther King, Jr., Planned Parenthood, Prescott Bush, Cervical Cancer, Chlamydia, Texas, Medicaid, Brown v. Board of Education, Segregation

Subjects

Africana Studies Program, Dr. John T. Washington Lecture Series, Michele Bratcher Goodwin, Chancellor’s Professor of Law at the University of California-Irvine School of Law, Center for Biotechnology, Global Health Policy, Reproductive Justice Initiative, Reproductive Rights, Human rights, Civil Rights, race, Eugenics, University of Minnesota, State Fair, Law, Medicine, Constitutional Law, Organ transplant policy, Slavery, Sojourner Truth, Buck v. Bell, 1927, Virginia, Forced Sterilization, Carrie Buck, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Nazis, U.S. Supreme Court, World War II, Skinner v. Oklahoma, Mississippi, appendectomy, Black Women, Pregnancy, Biology, History, Law, Jim Crow South, Voting Rights, Ebola, Quarantine, Ellis Island, Angel Island, Coronavirus, Abstinence, Sexually Transmitted Diseases, Infant Mortality, Bosnia, Maternal Health, Kenya, Poverty, Abortion, Syphilis, CDC, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Contraception, Roe v. Wade, Richard Nixon, George H. W. Bush, Martin Luther King, Jr., Planned Parenthood, Prescott Bush, Cervical Cancer, Chlamydia, Texas, Medicaid, Brown v. Board of Education, Segregation

Length of Episode

34:07

Episode 16: Overcoming Injustice: Why Women's Constitutional Citizenship Still Matters.


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