HUMANIZING BIRTH: LAUNCHING CRITICAL MIDWIFERY STUDIES. Summer School July 2022

OPENING MORNING, OPENING LECTURE: Rodante van der Waal, Introducing Critical Midwifery Studies and welcome
OPENING PANEL: Elizabeth Newnham, Heba Farajallah, Fatimah Mohamied, Humanizing Birth: Past & Future
DAY ONE ANTI-RACIST PERSPECTIVES: Natali Valdez, Weighing the Future: Race, Science & Pregnancy Trials in the Postgenomic Era
DAY TWO QUEER & DECOLONIAL PERSEPCTIVES, OPENING LECTURE: Jason Marcus, Critical Midwifery Studies: queer and decolonial perspectives.
DAY TWO QUEER & DECOLONIAL PERSEPCTIVES: Shehnaz Munschi & Lance Louskieter, Critical Perspectives towards Humanizing Birth
DAY THREE FEMINIST & POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES: Maria Jose Sanchez, Gender Theory: Everyday Experience
DAY THREE FEMINIST & POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES: Bianca Zorzam, How Can We Think Decolonial Obstetrics?
DAY FOUR POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES: Kanchana Mahadevan, Nursing Care Work and Feminism in India: Dissonances and Consonance
DAY FIVE FUTURIST PERSPECTIVES, OPENING LECTURE: Madyasa Vijber, Critical Midwifery Studies
DAY FIVE FUTURIST PERSPECTIVES: Mars Lord, Reproductive and Transformative Justice
OPENING MORNING, OPENING KEYNOTE: Inge van Nistelrooij, Humanizing Birth from a Care Ethics Perspective
DAY ONE ANTI-RACIST PERSPECTIVES, OPENING LECTURE: Anna Horn, Critical Midwifery Studies
DAY ONE ANTI-RACIST PERSPECTIVES: Lucia Rocca-Ihenacho & Cassandra Yiull, Re-Envisioning Maternity: what can the bio-psycho-social model offer?
DAY TWO QUEER & DECOLONIAL PERSEPCTIVES: Rachelle Chadwick, Haunting Birth: Gender, Coloniality & Obstetric Violence
DAY THREE FEMINIST & POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES, OPENING LECTURE: Susana Ku, Critical Midwifery Studies
DAY THREE FEMINIST & POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES: Johanna Orejula Ramirez, Traditional Afro-Colombian Midwifery
DAY THREE FEMINIST & POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES: Hector Kemble, Camila Videla & Michelle Sadler, Midwifery Activism
DAY FOUR POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES: Asha Achutan, Notes on an Absence: The Dai Figure Then and Now in Childbirth
DAY FIVE FUTURIST PERSPECTIVES: Montse Olmos, What Can We Learn from Indigenous Midwifery in Mexico?
DAY FIVE FUTURIST PERSPECTIVES: Sabia Wade, Futurist Perspectives/ Emergent Stratgies
OPENING MORNING KEYNOTE: Amrita Banerjee, Reciprocity within Vulnerability: Third Party Reproduction and Caring for Birth-Givers
DAY ONE ANTI-RACIST PERSPECTIVES: Dana-Aín Davis, The Labor(s) of Birth Work: Doula Work as Mutual Aid
DAY ONE ANTI-RACIST PERSPECTIVES: Jennie Joseph, Transforming Maternal Heal Care in America’s Materno-Toxic Zones
DAY TWO QUEER & DECOLONIAL PERSEPCTIVES: Jabulile Mary-Jane Jace Mavuso, Moving Beyond Cis Women: gender & sex diversity in pregnancy
DAY THREE FEMINIST & POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES: Michelle Sadler, Childbirth Activism in Latin America: observations on obstetric violence
DAY THREE FEMINIST & POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES: Rosalynn Vega, Mexican Midwifery: Critical Race & Decolonial Studies
DAY FOUR POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES, OPENING LECTURE: Priya Sharma, Critical Midwifery Studies: Postcolonial Perspectives
DAY FOUR POSTCOLONIAL PERSPECTIVES: Kaveri Mayra, Can Decolonization Make Birth a Pleasurable Experience?
DAY FIVE FUTURIST PERSPECTIVES: Sophie Lewis, A Comradely Politics of Gestational Labour
CLOSING LECTURE: Bahareh Goodarzi, Take Critical Midwifery Studies Further With US!
All drawings are made by the artist Noëmie Willemen
%d bloggers liken dit: