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What is the result of bringing together the AAP staff, field
team, board and close colleagues from across the country? Creative thinking on
some of the most pressing issues around abortion access today. The Abortion
Access Project's 2008 National Convening, held in early October in Cambridge,
MA, gathered researchers, educators, clinicians, and advocates working
nationally and in the states to discuss strategies for improving and sustaining
abortion access in those communities most often overlooked by larger
reproductive health and rights initiatives.
In addition to presentations by experts in rural and
community health, breakout sessions facilitated in-depth discussion and the
identification of collaborative next steps on issues including self-induced
abortion, persistent gaps in abortion training and advocacy-driven research on
abortion access.
“I feel re-energized by the discussions – I so infrequently
have the chance to think aloud with colleagues from different organizations and
perspectives.” Convening attendee
Organized as a follow-up to AAP’s first
Convening held in 2006, the 2008 Convening sparked ideas including a
clearinghouse on abortion training resources, a cross-organization research
group focusing on rural women and abortion, and assessing public opinion when
women are prosecuted for self-inducing abortion
"The National Convening is a rare opportunity to think
strategically and collaboratively with a wide cross section of our closest
colleagues. During our first convening, in 2006, these discussions were
instrumental in the development of AAP’s strategic framework. Two years later,
it is remarkable to have the 2008 Convening serve as a similar catalyst for our
more developed work,” notes Melanie Zurek, AAP’s Executive Director. “And,”
Zurek adds, “for the work of Convening participants. Because of our
emphasis on collaboration, AAP is able to bring people together in a way that
promotes solutions to problems of access that none of us could achieve working
alone."
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