Available Formats
The Fall of Roe
By (Author) Lisa Lerer
By (author) Elizabeth Dias
Bonnier Books Ltd
Manilla Press
15th October 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Womens health
Educational: Social sciences, social studies
Paperback
448
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 32mm
537g
Women today are more equal than at any other time in American history. The #MeToo movement has transformed American workplaces. Christian power is weakening as the US grows increasingly secular. Democrats currently control Washington. And yet in this moment of growing equality and diminishing religiosity, women have lost one of the cornerstone achievements of liberal politics: the right to access an abortion.
It's easy to characterise abortion politics as a familiar, decades-long battle- evangelicals against feminists, Republican states versus Democratic states, grassroots fighting elites. That kind of political thinking misunderstands the current moment. Abortion is, of course, about a right to terminate a pregnancy. But it's also the stage where the United States works through some of its most fundamental cultural and moral debates.
In THE FALL OF ROE, two top New York Times journalists, Elizabeth Dias and Lisa Lerer, have written the definitive book on the end of Roe, revealing how the strategic battle over the most contentious topic in politics helps us understand the battle for control over America. THE FALL OF ROE looks at the playbook for how the religious right came to dominate American politics, a strategy that has vaulted anti-abortion activists into central roles in the conservative movement. And unless Democrats shift their strategy, it is those activists who will be the power brokers who determine the future of America. Furthermore, given that these debates and strategies have influence here and throughout the world, THE FALL OF ROE will be essential not only for understanding America but also informing our own future.
As the National Political Correspondent for The New York Times, Lisa Lerer has covered American politics, power, and elections for nearly two decades. Lisa's coverage has focused largely on Democrats. During the 2020 campaign, she wrote the most detailed story about Joe Biden's shifting views on the issue over his decades in public life and has followed how his personal discomfort with the issue has hampered the response of his administration to this moment. Lisa has also tracked the failures of liberals to motivate their base around the issue - or confront it aggressively after taking power.
Elizabeth Dias, the National Religion Correspondent for The New York Times, has tackled the issue from nearly the exact opposite vantage point. She has covered American religion and its politics for a decade, with a special focus on the surging power and grievance of conservative Christianity that drives the Trump movement. Her sourcing among the Catholic and evangelical powerbrokers and grassroots of the anti-abortion movement is unparalleled. She is a Livingston finalist and received the top awards in 2021 from the Religion News Association.