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MORE THAN A MAGAZINE, A MOVEMENT
Dear John,
In the Spring 2023 issue of Ms. , on newsstands April 7, contributing editor Carrie Baker examines how the legal reasoning used in Dobbs could erode women’s rights beyond abortion. The majority opinion in Dobbs argued that the “14th Amendment protects only rights explicitly mentioned in the Constitution, those intended to be protected by the framers of the 14th Amendment in 1868, or rights ‘deeply rooted in the Nation’s history and traditions’.” Using this approach the Court overturned Roe v. Wade , and as Baker explains “…if applied to the 14th Amendment equal protection clause itself, could overturn or erode constitutional sex equality law …” for women altogether.
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And constitutional law experts interviewed by Baker agree. “A Court that doesn’t feel like abiding by 50 years of precedent, doesn’t need to respect precedents … against sex-based discrimination,” said Melissa Murray, a New York University law professor. “That is ominous.”
Ms . examines how feminists can make lasting advancements on women’s rights.
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Also in the Spring issue:
- An investigation into the adoption option. During oral arguments in Dobbs , Justice Amy Coney Barrett contended that abortion is no longer needed because “safe-haven laws take care of that problem.” And Justice Samuel Alito wrote in a footnote that “a woman who puts her newborn up for adoption today has little reason to fear that the baby will not find a suitable home.” Ms .’s reporter fact-checked Coney Barrett’s and Alito’s suggestions, which one interviewee called “horrific,” brutal” and “cruel.”
- A look inside the state-by-state battle for abortion rights. After six state-level wins in the 2022 midterms, reproductive-rights advocates see a path to victory: letting the voters decide. “So many people have felt despair in reaction to the fall of Roe and feel like there are so few things we can do to protect our own rights and the rights of people we love around the country,” Kelly Hall, executive director of the Fairness Project, told Ms . “Ballot measures offer a really important work-around when our elected leaders are acting so far outside of our strong policy opinions as citizens.”
- A report from the front lines in Ukraine’s Donetsk and Kharkiv Oblasts. Ms . contributor Katie Livingstone introduces readers to a few tough mothers who have rejected the narrative that casts women with children as victims of war. They are part of the growing number of Ukrainian women who are fighting to bring about the war’s end. “If I go home, the war won’t stop, and [my son’s] not safe,” explained one of the mothers, now a sergeant in the Ukrainian Armed Forces.
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When you become a member of Ms., you get the magazine in print or on our app, or both [[link removed]] —and you’re the first to get action alerts and invitations to virtual and live events from our team. When you become a member, you're supporting independent, feminist media—and becoming part of a global community of feminists who care about the issues that matter to you.
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For equality,
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Kathy Spillar
Executive Editor
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