"In this deft analysis of contemporary Mexican midwifery, anthropologist Lydia Dixon incisively reveals how Mexican midwives' unique positionality, at once outside and inside mainstream medicine, enables them to humanize childbirth and advance social justice. Through superb ethnographic skills and lucid prose, Dixon offers a nuanced portrait of midwives' perpetual challenges and surprising resilience. While regulating women's bodies remains essential to state-building and national development worldwide, Mexican midwives are expanding the terms of these processes."
—Carole H. Browner, editor of Reproduction, Globalization, and the State: New Theoretical and Ethnographic Perspectives
"Lydia Z. Dixon offers an in-depth look at the history of midwifery in Mexico and provides an astute analysis of how midwives have constructed a politics of radical care through their critique of health systems. Delivering Health is an important contribution to the study of not only midwifery, but also to understanding how midwives' labor is indeed a form of social, political, and reproductive justice. This book is essential reading for those concerned about global maternal health and the politics and practice of midwifery."
—Dána-Ain Davis, author of Reproductive Injustice: Racism, Pregnancy, and Premature Birth