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Hot Flash

How the Law Ignores Menopause and What We Can Do About It

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

More than half the population will experience menopause; it is time for the law to acknowledge it.

Menopause is a stage of life that half the population will inevitably experience. But it remains one of the last great taboo topics for discussion, even among close friends and family members. Silence and stigmas around many aspects of reproductive health—from menstruation to infertility to miscarriage to abortion—have historically created the conditions in which bias and discrimination can flourish. Menopause exemplifies that phenomenon, and in Hot Flash, authors Emily Gold Waldman, Bridget Crawford, and Naomi Cahn set out to replace the silence surrounding menopause with a deeper understanding.

Hot Flash explores the culturally specific stereotypes that surround menopause as well as how menopause is treated in law and medicine. The book contextualizes menopause as one of several stages in a person's reproductive life. Taking U.S. law regarding pregnancy and breastfeeding as an entry point, the authors suggest changes in existing legislation and workplace policies that would incorporate menopause as well. More broadly, they push us to imagine how law can support a more equitable future.

A broader framework further enables the authors to explore menopause discrimination as it is experienced by trans men and gender nonbinary people. They ultimately make the case for a new wave of intersectional feminism that encompasses gender, disability, age, and race.

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    • Library Journal

      September 1, 2024

      Women are questioning how and if the medical system will support them as they navigate menopause, an often stigmatized, under-researched, and under-resourced phase of life. Pace Law School professors Waldman and Bridget Crawford (coauthors of Menstruation Matters) and Naomi Cahn (Univ. of Virginia Sch. of Law; Fair Shake) take a much-needed policy-oriented approach to the growing conversation around menopause. Their book provides detailed information about the history of misogyny and misinformation surrounding menopause, explores workplace inequities and laws related to the topic, and offers readers recommendations for how to advocate for themselves. Throughout the book are discussions of common yet underrecognized menopause symptoms, such as brain fog. It also discusses capitalist economies that exploit people's fears about the aging process, referencing everything from pop culture to public policy and laws that promote bias, stigmas, and silence. VERDICT This guide argues that societal, medical, and legal views of menopause need a makeover, and that people need to discuss menopause more. It thoroughly and expertly delivers details with a large dose of advocacy that could change things for the better.--Emily Bowles

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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