From Back Alley to the Border

£19.16 £19.99

From Back Alley to the Border

Criminal Abortion in California, 1920-1969

Ethical issues and debates Gender studies: women and girls Birth control, contraception, family planning History of the Americas Local history

Author: Alicia Gutierrez-Romine

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Language: English

Published by: University of Nebraska Press

Published on: 1st November 2020

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 1 Mb

ISBN: 9781496223111


In From Back Alley to the Border

Alicia Gutierrez-Romine examines the history of criminal abortion in California and the role abortion providers played in exposing and exploiting the faults in California's anti-abortion statute throughout the twentieth century. Focused on the patients who used this underground network and the physicians who facilitated it, Gutierrez-Romine provides insight into the world of illegal abortion from the 1920s through the 1960s, including regular physicians as well as women and African American abortionists, and the investigations, scandals, and trials that surrounded them.

During the 1930s the Pacific Coast Abortion Ring, a large, coast-wide, and comparatively safe abortion syndicate, became the target of law enforcement agencies, forcing those needing abortions across the border into Mexico and ushering in an era of Tijuana abortion tourism in the early 1950s. The movement south of the border ultimately compelled the California Supreme Court to rule its abortion statute void for vagueness in People v. Belous in 1969—four years before Roe v. Wade.

Gutierrez-Romine presents the first book focused on abortion on the West Coast and the U.S.-Mexico border and provides a new approach to studying how providers of illegal abortions and their clients navigated this underground network. In the post-Dobbs moment, this paperback edition of From Back Alley to the Border features a new afterword by the author and shows us how little we have learned from history.

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