RT Article T1 Women’s Reproductive Authority in Religious Ethics JF Journal of religious ethics VO 49 IS 2 SP 219 OP 225 A1 Kamitsuka, Margaret D. LA English PB Wiley-Blackwell YR 2021 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1767697309 AB This special issue addresses reproductive ethics in ways that critically engage and challenge the modes of gestating, birthing, and family-making that have been passed down in the texts and practices of Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. Seven scholars trained in biblical studies, theology, ethics, and philosophy bring feminist, womanist, and queer critical perspectives to bear on a range of religious discourses and practices having to do with reproductive realities. Each essay offers constructive ethical proposals that support women’s moral agency, increase women’s voice in institutional religion’s ethical decision-making, and strengthen women’s well-being, whether pursuing motherhood or living childfree. These essays emphasize the need for ethics to keep pace with new modes of defining family, the corporeality of pregnancy, personhood in the womb, and other reproductive issues. K1 Judaism K1 Islam K1 Christianity K1 reproductive ethics DO 10.1111/jore.12344