PUBLICATIONS BY FELICIA

Articles:

Felicia Kornbluh and Matt Vogel: Jewish communities at UVM — and in Vermont — are diverse, VTDigger, May 2024

How Black Leaders Formed the Reproductive Justice Movement, Ms. Magazine, February 2024

Roe v. Wade at 5, Prospect, January 2024

Making Abortion Safe Outside of the Legal System: A Q&A on Self-Managed Abortion, The Nation, January 2024

Felicia Kornbluh: State-by-state fights for abortion rights are exhausting and expensive, VTDigger, November 2023

Despite the Ohio Vote, History Reveals the Problem With a State-by-State Strategy on Abortion, Time, November 2023

Federal Judges Explain Things to Me, The American Prospect, April 2023

Abortion pill decision reveals how the debate has changed since Dobbs, Washington Post, April 2023

My Mother’s Fight For Abortion Access Can Teach Us About Reproductive Justice Today, Times, January 2023

The Grassroots of Roe,The New York Review, January 2023

How It Took a Diverse Coalition to Truly Fight for Reproductive Freedom in America, Literary Hub, January 2023

The 1960s provide a path for securing legal abortion in 2022, The Washington Post, June 2022

The Sense of an Ending, The American Prospect, June 2022

Still Anti-Abortion, but Can’t Swallow Alternative Facts, The American Prospect, June 2022

Red Wave to Repro Wave—and What’s Next, The American Prospect, November 2022

God Save the United States and This Honorable Court, The American Prospect, December 2021

What Ruth Bader Ginsburg got wrong about pre-Roe abortion fights, The Washington Post, December 2021

We Can Go Back, The American Prospect, September 2021

Will the Court Ignore Past Rulings in Its Zeal to Demolish Abortion Rights?, The American Prospect, March 2020

It’s not too late for progressives and Democrats to rethink anti-poverty strategies, The Hill, August 2018

How Do We Tell a New Generation of Teenagers About the Vietnam War?, NY Times, August 2018

Felicia Kornbluh: Why not a Women’s Party?, VTDigger, December 2017

Felicia Kornbluh and Gwendolyn Mink: Poor Mothers Don’t Matter in Welfare Policy, VTDigger, August 2015

Reviews by Felicia:

Women’s Review of Books, March/April 2018

Health Rights Are Civil Rights: Peace and Justice Activism in Los Angeles Review, The Journal of American History, June 2016

Eva Bertram- The Workfare State: Public Assistance Politics from the New Deal to the New Democrats, American Historical Review, June 2016

"13 Most Wanted Men: Andy Warhol and the 1964 World's Fair" by Larissa Harris, The Journal of American History, December 2014

Freedom Is Not Enough: The Moynihan Report and America's Struggle over Black Family Life—from LBJ to Obama, The American Historical Review, February 2012

Queer Legal History: A Field Grows Up and Comes Out, Law and Social Inquiry, Spring 2011

Law and History Review, Fall 2009

Law and History Review, Summer 2009

The Battle for Welfare Rights: Politics and Poverty in Modern America, Social Service Review, June 2008

Too Close for Comfort, The Women's Review of Books, Vol. 11, No. 2, Nov. 1993)

The Movement for Reproductive Freedom Is There Something for Everyone?, Off Our Backs, Vol. 21, No. 10 (November 1991)

Workers of the World, Disunite?, The Women's Review of Books, Vol. 8, No. 12 (Sep., 1991)

Journal Publications:

The Poverty Law Education of Charles Reich, Touro Law Review, 2021

Food as a Civil Right, LABOR May 2015

Siting the Legal History of Poverty: Below, Above and Amidst, A Companion to American Legal History, February 2013

Turning Back the Clock: California, Constitutionalists, Hearthstone Originalism and Brown V. Board,California Legal History, Vol.7, 2012

Disability, Antiprofessionalism, and Civil Rights: The National Federation of the Blind and the “Right to Organize” in the 1950s, The Journal of American History, March 2011

“Is Work the Only Thing that Pays? The Guaranteed Income and Other Alternative Anti-Poverty Policies in Historical Perspective”, Northwestern Journal of Law and Social Policy, Winter 2009

Who shot FAP? The Nixon welfare plan and the transformation of American politics,The Sixties: A Journal of History, Politics and Culture Vol. 1, No. 2, December 2008,