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U.S. Repro Watch, March 14
State courts rule for abortion protections while the Trump administration acts to deny emergency room abortion care, and other news on U.S. reproductive rights.
Protecting Medicaid Patients: Montana Court’s Ruling Blocks Hurdles to Abortion Care
State restrictions would have effectively eliminated access to abortion care for most Montanans insured through Medicaid.
Center Teams Join Global Leaders at UN for Commission on Status of Women
Meetings and events will examine progress and challenges on SRHR issues including sexual violence, access to abortion care, gender equality, anti-rights movements, and more.
Arizona Judge Permanently Blocks State’s 15-Week Abortion Ban, Declaring it Unconstitutional
Ban violates 2024 voter-approved amendment protecting abortion rights.
People Planning to Have Families—A Critical Part of the Workforce—Are Leaving U.S. States with Abortion Bans
New research finds that access to reproductive health care is playing a role in employee recruitment and retention—as well as states’ economic vitality.
Replay available! Center CEO Speaks at 2025 SXSW Conference
Replay now available! March 9 panel at the South by Southwest Conference discusses the importance of reproductive health care policies in attracting and retaining employees.
U.S. Repro Watch, February 26
One month of Trump 2.0, sepsis rates soar among pregnant Texans, and more news on U.S. reproductive rights.
Global Impact of the “They Are Girls, Not Mothers” Rulings Highlighted at Quito Press Conference
The Center’s Catalina Martínez Coral and movement partners discuss the recent landmark decisions by the UN Committee on Human Rights.
One Month of Trump 2.0: Amidst All the Chaos, Attacks on Reproductive Health and Rights
The new administration censors information, nominates extremists, imposes global restrictions, and more.
Georgians Directly Harmed by State’s Abortion Ban Share Their Stories in Court Filing
"Georgia's abortion ban endangers people's lives and health and doctors are not to blame for such harms." —Amicus brief submitted in case challenging the state's six-week ban