Department of Anthropology, Rhode Island College, Providence, Rhode Island, USA.
Med Anthropol. 2023 Apr 3;42(3):222-235. doi: 10.1080/01459740.2023.2185145. Epub 2023 Mar 2.
Narratives reflecting on a longitudinal study of sexual and reproductive health during the adolescent years of young, low-income, Black women in the US show that participants felt cared for, supported, and recognized during the study in ways counter to dominant modes of structural, medical, and obstetric racism and stratified reproduction. Black women's narratives illuminate how research tools offered access to alternative, unanticipated, and improvised sources of Black feminist care and social networks that have much to teach us about how to transform adolescent care in the face of reproductive injustices in the US.
反映美国年轻、低收入黑人女性青少年时期性与生殖健康纵向研究的叙述表明,参与者在研究过程中感到被关心、支持和认可,这与主导的结构性、医学性和产科种族主义以及分层生殖方式背道而驰。黑人女性的叙述阐明了研究工具如何为黑人女权主义关怀和社会网络提供了替代的、意料之外的和即兴的资源,这些资源为我们提供了很多关于如何在美国生殖不公正的情况下改革青少年护理的经验。