When: December 5, 2025, 12:30 – 1:30pm PT
Where: 221 Raitt Hall
Please join us on December 5th for CSDE’s Fall 2025 Lightning Talk and Poster Session from 12:30 – 1:30 PST! The poster session and talk will take place in Raitt Hall Room 221 at the University of Washington. This event will feature presentations from Yicong Guo (Doctoral Student, Sociology), Theresa Hwee (Doctoral Student, Health Services, Health Systems, and Population Health), Hyunji Kim (Doctoral Candidate, Economics), Mark Nepf (Doctoral Student, Evans School of Public Policy & Governance), Ann Richey (Doctoral Student, Epidemiology), Edward Stuart (Doctoral Student, Anthropology), and organized by Mingze Li (Doctoral Student, Sociology). We will provide light snacks and refreshments. Please find more information on the event here!
CSDE Affiliate Jeanie Santaularia Gomez (Epidemiology), former CSDE Trainee Maryam Tanveer (Epidemiology) and co-authors recently penned an essay in the American Journal of Public Health (AJPH) arguing that policies that intentionally or unintentionally restrict reproductive autonomy constitute an act of violence. The essay explores 3 illustrative examples of how governmental power—through the passage of laws—can both support and constrain reproductive autonomy across the life course: sex education, abortion restrictions, and parental leave policies. For each, the authors explain how the consequent harms overlap with those resulting from more traditional overt forms of violence. By framing the loss of reproductive autonomy as a form of violence, the authors underscore its profound and far-reaching harms, demanding urgent recognition and response as a critical public health and human rights issue.