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An edited volume always has a life of its own. Most chapters in this volume were conceptualised in two, related, workshops – ‘Reproductive Politics in India and South Africa’ and ‘New Reproduction and (Old) Stratifications’ – that I organised at the University of Cape Town, South Africa in 2017 and 2018. I am grateful to the sixteen participants, who travelled across borders and continents to our tip of the African continent, for the passionate debates and discussions on reproductive justice and reproductive politics in South Africa and India. I am particularly grateful to those who contributed their work to this volume. Thank you for your commitment and engagement. The first workshop culminated in a public lecture ‘Fertile Extractions: Women and Birth in the Global South’, co-hosted by the Department of Sociology, African Gender Studies and Sexual and Reproductive Justice Coalition (SRJC). Thank you, Malika Ndlovu, South African feminist poet and performer, for pushing us beyond the comfort zone of academic dialogue and bringing the joy and tears of poetry, dance and movement to this project. A special thanks to Dr Jessica Rucell for her more than able assistance in brainstorming with me about the content and planning of the workshop, and to Tinashe Kushata for managing the logistics and budget. I would also like to thank the National Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences (Grant: NIHSS/ICSSR201509) and the National Research Foundation (NRF) of South Africa (Grant 116345 & 118573) for generously funding the workshop and this research in such a way that we could include scholars and activists from India and other parts of South Africa. This book attests to the importance of funding transdisciplinary research, and the work and mobility of independent scholars and activists. The second workshop, part-funded by the NRF (grant 118573) and in part by the NIHSS-BRICS ThinkTank, focused specifically on the continuum of stratifications between technologies for population control and assisted fertility in the two countries. I would like to extend my thanks to the eight workshop participants for the two days of passionate dialogue and debate. A big thank you to Sepideh Azari for managing the complicated logistics of a transcontinental workshop with her usual charm, wit and camaraderie.
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