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This report is part of “America After Roe,” an examination of the impact of the reversal of Roe v. Wade on health care, culture, policy and people, produced by Carnegie-Knight News21. For more stories, visit americaafterroe.news21.com.

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Abortion-rights advocates rally in the Nebraska Capitol rotunda on April 12, 2023, in opposition to the Nebraska Heartbeat Act, which would have banned abortion around six weeks. The bill did not pass, but a 12-week ban is now law. (Photo by Joseph Kual Zakaria/News21)

Big loser in state legislatures after Roe: Compromise

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People walk by the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus on June 27, 2023. Other states are watching Ohio's dueling efforts to make it harder to pass amendments to the state constitution and to enshrine abortion rights in the constitution. (Photo by Mingson Lau/News21)

Ohio battle illustrates effect of Roe’s reversal on politics

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Anti-abortion advocate Mark Lee Dickson speaks at a Sanctuary Cities for the Unborn meeting at Vineyard Church of Prescott Valley in Arizona on June 11, 2023. (Photo by Mingson Lau/News21)

Anti-abortion advocate takes ‘sanctuary city’ work nationwide

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After Roe, New Mexico emerges as a new abortion battleground

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‘Crisis pregnancy centers’ get new spotlight in post-Roe abortion fight

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Saint Gianna & Pietro Molla Maternity Home, seen here on July 6, 2023, is an institution within the North Dakota anti-abortion movement. Located in Warsaw, the facility was originally a convent for nuns and a boarding school. It now serves young pregnant women. (Photo by Trilce Estrada Olvera/News21)

Post-Roe, North Dakota puts resources into alternatives to abortion

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Shaquira Brooks sits on her bed at Mother’s Hope on June 28, 2023, in Birmingham, Alabama, surrounded by notebooks full of homework and exercises. This is her second stay at the facility, where people who are pregnant, who have children or who have recently given birth are treated for substance use. (Photo by Shelby Rae Wills/News21)

‘We are fighting for our lives’: How states criminalize pregnancy

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Ellis Hospital – the only inpatient hospital in all of Schenectady County – would have to abide by ethical and religious directives that prohibit abortions and other care should a merger with St. Peter’s Health Partners become final. (Photo by Morgan Casey/News21)

Increasing Catholic health mergers may threaten reproductive access

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Esther Patterson is with BirthNet, an organization that works to eliminate health inequities for pregnant people. At a rally on June 20, 2023, Patterson called the proposed closure of Burdett Birth Center “a slap in the face to all of our Black and brown birthing families and all of the families that live in rural communities.” (Photo by Morgan Casey/News21)

Activists oppose closure of New York birth center

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Sandy Harris, left, and Jonnette Paddy, right, with Indigenous Women Rising talk about abortion care and reproductive health with attendees at the “Women Are Sacred” conference on June 27, 2023 in Albuquerque, N.M. (Photo by Noel Lyn Smith/News21)

Indigenous people navigate abortion access after Roe

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In the South, grassroots activists are working to combat maternal mortality rates. Among them, from left, are: Maya Hart and Monica Simpson of SisterSong; Iesha Lynch, a birth, death and postpartum doula; Maya Jackson, founder of MAAME; and Tina Braimah, a midwife and owner of Sankofa Birth and Women’s Care. (Photos by Shelby Rae Wills/News21)

Activists unite to fight maternal mortality post-Roe

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Abortion bans compromise maternal health, doctors say

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The National Association of Christian Lawmakers was founded in 2019 and now has members and supporters in all 50 states. The NACL and similar groups are capitalizing on the momentum of the reversal of Roe v. Wade to pursue more biblically informed policy. (Photo courtesy of National Association of Christian Lawmakers)

Christian lawmakers push battle over church and state after Roe

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Mexican abortion-pill networks reach across U.S. border to help immigrants without access

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Grupos mexicanos ayudan a activistas estadounidenses a construir redes de píldoras abortivas

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DakotaRei Frausto, who is Mescalero Apache and lives in San Antonio, was 17 years old when they learned they were eight weeks pregnant. Because of Texas’ six-week abortion ban, they had to travel to New Mexico for the procedure. (Photo by Kevin Palomino/News21)

17 and pregnant in Texas: One Indigenous teen tells their story

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After Roe v. Wade was overturned, some prosecutors vowed not to prosecute abortion-related cases. Now states are fighting back, passing laws or using executive orders to limit prosecutorial discretion. (Photo by Joseph Kual Zakaria/News21)

Abortion debate spurs new efforts to restrict prosecutorial discretion

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