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“No child should be here”

Repro Nation Monthly | March 2026
People gather in protest against Immigration and Customs Enforcement before marching toward the South Texas Family Residential Center on January 28, 2026 in Dilley, Texas. (Joel Angel Juarez / Getty Images)
Public pressure works
If, like me, you’ve been following YouTube educator and advocate Ms. Rachel on social media, you’re feeling both enraged and hopeful as March wraps up. Let me explain.

 

The past few weeks have brought countless reports of state-sanctioned abuse of children in ICE custody. One of the children, 5-year-old Gael, is nonverbal and has “significant developmental delays and other medical challenges,” according to NBC News, which has been following his family’s case. Gael’s parents migrated to the US from Colombia and were receiving care for their son, including a specialized diet to manage constipation, in El Paso before they were taken into custody at a routine immigration check-in appointment in early March, despite having pending asylum claims and no criminal history. Ms. Rachel spoke to the family over Zoom, where she learned that Gael had not had a bowel movement in 9 days. She told her five million Instagram followers on March 14, “This little guy needs us,” as his family explained in an interview from the facility that “No child should be here, regardless of their condition.” Ten days later, NBC News reported that the family was finally released from the Dilley Immigration Processing Center.

 

We know public pressure works, and it’s been an important lever to pull as we witness a breakdown of the three branches of government under Trump. It’s also never been clearer why we need reproductive justice and the ability to parent our children in safe and sustainable communities, free of traumatizing immigration policies and detainment.

 

So we can celebrate the family’s release and the fact that the population at Dilley has dropped from more than 900 at a recent peak to some 100 in the past week, according to ProPublica, which published an investigation featuring interviews with the children there in early February. But it won’t be enough until Dilley closes (again)—for good.

 

But back to the rage: Reading can be a salve in these times. Might I suggest stocking up, or requesting from your local library, the books included in this excellent reproductive rights reading list at Literary Hub for Women’s History Month? Compiled by veteran journalist Clara Bingham, the author of The Movement: How Women’s Liberation Transformed America 1963-1973, the list includes some recent Repro Nation faves (including my book!). We’ve got to keep reading, while we still can.

 

In solidarity,

 

Regina Mahone

Senior Editor, The Nation

Coauthor, Liberating Abortion

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Repro Nation’s Book of the Month
How did the anti-abortion movement win their decades-long battle against Roe v. Wade, when most Americans have supported legal abortion since Roe was decided? How did anti-choice activists succeed in making this commonplace procedure seem to be stigmatized and embattled? Amy Littlefield, the Nation‘s abortion access correspondent, took to the archives, and called up some of the most effective anti-choice activists of the past 50 years, to tell the story of the mass movement that would turn abortion into a potent political issue and overturn Roe. Framed as a murder mystery in which Amy searches for the culprit responsible for the deaths of women that have resulted from making abortion illegal, Killers of Roe tells a story that’s essential to understanding the political moment we find ourselves in, and the work the pro-choice movement must embrace in order to usher in a world in which reproductive rights are accessible to everyone.

 

Emily Douglas,

Senior Editor, The Nation

 

ICYMI: A Virtual Conversation with Amy Littlefield and Regina Mahone
On March 12, 2026, Amy Littlefield, The Nation’s abortion access correspondent and the prize–winning author of the new book Killers of Roe joined Nation senior editor Regina Mahone for a virtual conversation about abortion access, her new book, and much more. Watch the conversation in entirety here.
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What We’re Reading
Study: Fewer Americans Traveled Out of State for Abortion Care (U.S. News)
Pregnancy-Loss Doulas Guide El Pasoans After Miscarriage, Abortion (El Paso Matters)
A Boise Doctor Treats High-Risk Pregnancies. He’s Suing Idaho Over Its Abortion Laws (Idaho Statesman)
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‘I Will Never Relinquish My License’: New Law Stokes Fear, Confusion and Defiance for Trans Kansans (Kansas Reflector)
How Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Vaccine Agenda Risks a Resurgence of Deadly Childhood Plagues (ProPublica)
Trump Administration Launches Investigation of States that Mandate Health Insurance Covers Abortion (Associated Press)
The United Kingdom’s Decriminalization of Abortion: What the United States Can Learn from Abortion Criminalization in a Global Context (O’Neill Institute)
Pregnant in ICE Detention: Handcuffs and Pleas for Medical Care (The New York Times)
ICE Has Abruptly Deported Thousands of Kids. Their Families Say It Traumatized Them. (The Marshall Project)
What ICE Detention Does to a Child (The Cut)
ICE Has Been Deporting Pregnant and Postpartum Immigrants. Now We Know How Many. (The 19th)
They Didn’t Want to Have C-Sections. A Judge Would Decide How They Gave Birth. (ProPublica)
Mississippi Leads the Nation in Gun Deaths Among Those Who Are Pregnant and Postpartum (Mississippi Today)
Oscar-Nominated Documentary ‘The Devil Is Busy’ Shows What It Takes to Keep an Abortion Clinic Safe (Ms. magazine)
These Women Exposed Prison Sexual Abuse. Now ICE Wants to Deport Them. (Truthout)
The Harrowing Journey Home for Families Leaving Immigration Detention (The Marshall Project)
Read all of the latest abortion news and analysis from The Nation here.
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