Nancy Miriam Hawley is an activist and feminist who contributed to the founding of Our Bodies, Ourselves. She also serves as a co-author of Ourselves and Our Children, and a publisher of You and Your Partner, Inc: Entrepreneurial Couples Succeeding in Business, Life and Love, in which she teamed up with her husband to publish. Hawley is also a clinical social worker, group therapist, principal clinical social worker for the Cambridge Hospital of Harvard Medical School, an organizational consultant and coach to business executives, and CEO of Enlightenment, Inc. She has worked with the Boston Women's Health Book Collective's board to help create ways to influence future health related issues.
Encouraged by her mother, who never had a chance to obtain a professional degree, Hawley became a first-generation student who graduated from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor where she received her Bachelor’s degree in History and Psychology. In addition, she received her Master’s degree in Social Work. Her specialty in groups and organizations led her to become a member of multiple groups and organizations, including the National Association of Social Workers, the Northeast Society of Group Psychotherapy, Women in Business Connection, and The Family Firm Institute.
In 1966, after the birth of Hawley's first son, she paid a visit to her OB/GYN for her six-week check up at the age of 23. During this check up, Hawley's doctor recommended she try a new pill on the market for birth control. When she asked what was in it, her doctor simply told her not to worry about it, and she refused to take the pill. At the time, most OB/GYNs were male, and most of the time husbands were told about their wives' conditions instead of the woman herself. In 2004, when reflecting on the 35th birthday of the first meeting, Hawley said, "We weren't encouraged to ask questions, but to depend on the so-called experts. Not having a say in our own health care frustrated and angered us. We didn't have the information we needed, so we decided to find it on our own." At a conference organized by the Women’s, Gender, & Sexuality Studies Program at Boston University, Hawley claimed she had one burning question: "what's in this birth control pill?" It was a question her doctor would not answer, and this led her to find her own answers.