References
- Asian Communities for Reproductive Justice. (2005). A new vision for advancing our movement for reproductive health, reproductive rights, and reproductive justice. Retrieved from http://strongfamiliesmovement.org/assets/docs/ACRJ-A-New-Vision.pdf
- Espino, V. (2000). Woman sterilized as gives birth: Forced sterilization and Chicana resistance in the 1970s. In V. L. Ruiz (Ed.), Las obreras: Chicana politics of work and family (pp. 65–82). Los Angeles, CA: Chicano Studies Research Center Publications, University of California.
- Gehrke, J. (2013, July 7). California prison doctors sterilized women to cut welfare costs. Washington Examiner. Retrieved from http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/california-prison-doctors-sterilized-women-to-cut-welfare-costs/article/2532752
- Gutiérrez, E. R. (2008). Fertile matters: The politics of Mexican-origin women’s reproduction. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press.
- Sister Song. (n.d.). Reproductive justice. Retrieved from http://sistersong.net/reproductive-justice/
- Stern, A. (2015). Eugenic nation: Faults and frontiers of better breeding in America (2nd ed.). Oakland, CA: University of California Press.
- Velez, C. (1980). “Se Me Acabo La Cancion”: An ethnography of non-consenting sterilizations among Mexican women in Los Angeles. In M. Mora & A. Del Castillo (Eds.), Mexican women in the United States: Struggles past and present (pp. 71–91). Los Angeles, CA: University of California, Los Angeles, Chicano Studies Research Center.