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I always say, the movement for reproductive justice found me. As I was completing my last book, I was struggling with an array of emotions about the research, mainly sadness and anger at neoliberal immigration policies, as I grappled with making sense of Latinxs’ daily experiences with migration and poverty that often had such painful outcomes. Out of nowhere I received an email inviting me to a presentation on comprehensive sex ed to be presented by adolescent Latinxs, a man and a woman, using the reproductive justice approach in Fresno, California. This meant that these young people probably came from farmworker backgrounds since Fresno is in the middle of the San Joaquin Valley, where the largest employers are in agribusiness and so many of the workers are migrants. I was intrigued by the reproductive justice approach that involved young men and gratified that these young people were actively trying to change conditions related to their well-being. I resolved to look into the reproductive justice movement, and eventually my interests blossomed into a full-scale research project. I was drawn to researching this movement in part because the participants use an approach based in intersectionality, which I have used in my own research and teaching.
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