As abortion restrictions continue to advance in state legislatures across the country, it’s crucial to recognize that other kinds of assaults on our bodily agency and autonomy—like high maternal and infant mortality and unsafe drinking water that can impact healthy development—persist as well.
We are asking you to support BIPOC-led (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) organizations that work to defend and expand abortion access, but that also approach their work through a reproductive justice lens.
Reproductive justice is a framework founded by Black women that centers the most marginalized, analyzes power structures and addresses intersecting oppressions, and recognizes that abortion access is not the only reproductive and sexual health inequity people face.
Please consider giving to each of these organizations:
In Our Own Voice: National Black Women’s Reproductive Justice Agenda is a Reproductive Justice partnership of eight Black women’s Reproductive Justice organizations. In Our Own Voice amplifies the voices of Black women at national and regional levels in the ongoing fight to secure Reproductive Justice for all.
URGE: Unite for Reproductive & Gender Equity builds power and sustains a young people’s movement for reproductive justice by centering the leadership of young people of color who are women, queer, trans, non-binary, and low-income.
National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum (NAPAWF) builds power with AAPI women and girls. Using a reproductive justice framework, NAPAWF elevates AAPI women and girls to impact policy and drive systemic change in the United States.
SisterSong is the largest national multi-ethnic Reproductive Justice Collective. SisterSong is a thought leader, movement voice, ambassador, and organizer, and seeks to improve institutional policies and systems that impact the reproductive lives of marginalized communities.
National Network of Abortion Funds builds power with members to remove financial and logistical barriers to abortion access by centering people who have abortions and organizing at the intersections of racial, economic, and reproductive justice.