“This fascinating modern history illustrates how state-sponsored, religiously orthodox pronatalism in Russia has limited access to birth control and safe abortion—causing both women and family planning advocates to suffer. An important cautionary tale about why punitive reproductive regimes and illiberal-nationalist visions matter so greatly in the world today.”
—Marcia C. Inhorn, author of Motherhood on Ice: The Mating Gap and Why Women Freeze Their Eggs
“In this searing account of Russian family planners’ strategic efforts to ‘fight abortion, not women’ under Soviet and post-Soviet regimes, Rivkin-Fish reveals the acute costs to both women and health institutions when reproductive health care is approached as state biopolitics."
—Heather Paxson, author of Making Modern Mothers: Ethics and Family Planning in Urban Greece
“Drawing on a rich set of ethnographic data and historical materials, this incredibly important book will be widely read across a number of fields: medical anthropology, medical sociology, science and technology studies, health studies, women’s studies, Soviet/post-Soviet studies, and many others.”
—Melissa L. Caldwell, author of Living Faithfully in an Unjust World: Compassionate Care in Russia