DOI: 10.1111/aman.70094 ISSN: 0002-7294

Bodies, Stereotypes, and Reproduction: Black Migrants Experiencing Obstetric Violence and Racism in Portugal

Catarina Barata, Chiara Pussetti

ABSTRACT

This article explores how the mistreatment of women in health care facilities in Portugal takes on particular forms for Black migrant women, shaped by essentialist ideas about race and miscegenation. In line with academic production on processes of racialization and discrimination against minorities and the medicalization of reproductive processes and biocontrol, this paper focuses on how these phenomena are reflected in the gynecological and obstetric care of Black women of Brazilian and African origin in Portugal. The women interviewed within the authors’ research on the ethnopolitics of citizenship and on obstetric violence speak of discrimination based on their ethno‐racial, national, and migration status, as well as perceived ideas about their sexuality, behavior, and preferences in maternity and childbirth. Afro‐descendant women's interactions with workers of the health and social care sectors in Portugal are often informed by stereotypes about their bodies and their presumed (in)capacities to be good mothers. By focusing on the experiences of Black migrant women and their perceptions of public health and maternal care, this paper builds on previous work by the authors to address the issue of gynecological and obstetric violence in Portugal.

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