Roe v. Wade
Roe v. Wade | |
---|---|
Argued December 13, 1971 Reargued October 11, 1972 Decided January 22, 1973 | |
Full case name | Jane Roe, et al. v. Henry Wade, District Attorney of Dallas County |
Citations | 410 U.S. 113 (more) 93 S. Ct. 705; 35 L. Ed. 2d 147; 1973 U.S. LEXIS 159 |
Argument | Oral argument |
Reargument | Reargument |
Decision | Opinion |
Case history | |
Prior | Judgment for plaintiffs, injunction denied, 314 F. Supp. 1217 (N.D. Tex. 1970); probable jurisdiction noted, 402 U.S. 941 (1971); set for reargument, 408 U.S. 919 (1972) |
Subsequent | Rehearing denied, 410 U.S. 959 (1973) |
Holding | |
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides a fundamental "right to privacy" that protects a pregnant woman's liberty to choose whether to have an abortion. This right is not absolute, and must be balanced against the government's interests in protecting women's health and protecting prenatal life. The Texas law making it a crime to procure an abortion violated this right. | |
Court membership | |
| |
Case opinions | |
Majority | Blackmun, joined by Burger, Douglas, Brennan, Stewart, Marshall, Powell |
Concurrence | Burger |
Concurrence | Douglas |
Concurrence | Stewart |
Dissent | White, joined by Rehnquist |
Dissent | Rehnquist |
Laws applied | |
U.S. Const. Amend. XIV; Tex. Code Crim. Proc. arts. 1191–94, 1196 | |
Overruled by | |
(partially) Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992) |
Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973),[1] was a landmark decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in which the Court ruled that the Constitution of the United States protects a pregnant woman's liberty to choose to have an abortion without excessive government restriction. The decision struck down many U.S. federal and state abortion laws.[2][3] Roe fueled an ongoing abortion debate in the United States about whether or to what extent abortion should be legal, who should decide the legality of abortion, and what the role of moral and religious views in the political sphere should be. It also shaped debate concerning which methods the Supreme Court should use in constitutional adjudication.
The decision involved the case of Norma McCorvey—known under the legal pseudonym "Jane Roe"—who in 1969 became pregnant with her third child. McCorvey wanted an abortion but lived in Texas, where abortion was illegal except when necessary to save the mother's life. Her attorneys, Sarah Weddington and Linda Coffee, filed a lawsuit on her behalf in U.S. federal court against her local district attorney, Henry Wade, alleging that Texas's abortion laws were unconstitutional. A three-judge panel of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas ruled in her favor. Texas then appealed directly to the U.S. Supreme Court.
In January 1973, the Supreme Court issued a 7–2 decision in McCorvey's favor ruling that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides a "right to privacy" protecting a pregnant woman's right to choose whether to have an abortion. But it also ruled that this right is not absolute and must be balanced against governments' interests in protecting women's health and prenatal life.[4][5] The Court resolved this balancing test by tying the degree of state regulation permitted to the trimester of pregnancy which is to be aborted.[5] The Court also required lower courts to evaluate challenges to abortion related laws under the "strict scrutiny" standard, the most stringent degree of judicial review in the United States.[6]
The Court's ruling in Roe was criticized by some in the legal community,[7] and some called the decision an example of judicial activism.[8] The Supreme Court revisited and modified Roe's legal rulings in its 1992 decision Planned Parenthood v. Casey.[9] In Casey, the Court reaffirmed Roe's holding that a woman's right to choose to have an abortion is constitutionally protected, but abandoned Roe's trimester framework in favor of a standard based on fetal viability and overruled the strict scrutiny standard implemented in 1973.[4][10]
Background
History of abortion laws in the United States
In 1821, Connecticut passed the first state statute banning abortion in the United States.[11] In 1868, abortion by itself was not legal before quickening in 27 out of all thirty-seven states. Altogether, 30 of the thirty-seven states and 6 of the ten U.S. territories had codified laws which restricted abortion.[12] Every state had abortion legislation by 1900.[11]
Abortion[13] and infanticide were common practices in the Kingdom of Hawai'i, but infanticide was criminalized in 1835[14] and had disappeared or become infrequent by at least 1846.[15] Abortion, except to save the mother's life, was criminalized in 1850,[16] and the statutes continued in effect following the adoption of English common law[17] and also following annexation by the United States.[14]
In the United States, abortion itself was sometimes considered a common law offense before specific statutes were made against it.[18] In all states throughout the 19th and early 20th century, pre-quickening abortions were always considered to be actions without a lawful purpose. This meant that if the mother died, the individual performing the abortion was guilty of murder. This aspect of common law regarded pre-quickening abortions as a type of inchoate felony.[19] Negative liberty rights from common law do not apply in situations caused by consensual or voluntary behavior, which allowed for abortions of fetuses conceived in a consensual manner to be common law offences.[20] The majority opinion for Roe v. Wade authored in Justice Harry Blackmun's name would later claim that the criminalization of abortion did not have "roots in the English common-law tradition".[21]
One purpose for banning abortion was to preserve the life of the fetus,[23] another was to protect the life of the mother, another was to create deterrence against future abortions,[24] and another was avoid injuring the mother's ability to have children. Judges did not always distinguish between which purpose was more important.[25] Rather than arresting the women having the abortions, legal officials were more likely to interrogate them to obtain evidence against the abortion provider.[26] This law enforcement strategy was a response to juries which refused to convict women prosecuted for abortion in the 19th century.[27] In 1973, Justice Harry Blackmun's opinion stated that "the restrictive criminal abortion laws in effect in a majority of States today are of relatively recent vintage".[28] Justice Blackmun's opinion also cited differences between permissive and restrictive abortion attitudes and laws throughout history and among different professions to argue that there was no consensus about abortion.[29]
By 1971, elective abortion on demand was effectively available in Alaska, California, Washington, D.C., Washington state, Hawaii, and New York.[30] Some women traveled to jurisdictions where it was legal, although not all could afford to.[31] In 1971, Shirley Wheeler was charged with manslaughter after Florida hospital staff reported her illegal abortion to the police. Wheeler was one of few women who were prosecuted by their states for abortion.[32] She received a sentence of two years probation and as an option under her probation, chose to move back into her parents' house in North Carolina.[26] The Playboy Foundation donated $3,500 to her defense fund and Playboy magazine denounced her prosecution.[33] The Boston Women's Abortion Coalition raised money and held a rally where attendees listened to speakers from the Women's National Abortion Action Coalition (WONAAC).[34] Her conviction was overturned by the Supreme Court of Florida.[26]
History of the case
Sarah Weddington was persuaded to join Linda Coffee after listening to her give a speech about a new lawsuit she was going to file representing a woman and her husband. The suit would claim that the woman needed to be able to have abortions, because the woman had a neurochemical disorder and should not give birth or raise children, they didn't want to abstain from sex, and contraception might fail.[35] But one lawsuit was not enough, since they wanted to go forum shopping to improve their chances of winning in court. They wanted to have another case so that they would end up with different judges due to the rotating system used for assigning cases to judges. Then, if either received a particular judge who they thought would be sympathetic, they would ask to combine the cases.[35] Weddington later wrote that they "needed to find a pregnant Texas woman who wanted an abortion and would be willing to be a plaintiff."[35]
At first she was unsuccessful in finding a suitable pregnant woman.[36] In June 1969, 21-year-old Norma McCorvey discovered she was pregnant with her third child. She returned to Dallas and attempted to obtain an illegal abortion, but found that the unauthorized facility had been closed down by the police. McCorvey had a mixed reaction to the closure. She later recounted:[37]
For some reason, I felt relieved yet angry at the same time. All my emotions were peaking; first I was angry, then I was happy, and then I'd cry. From the abortion clinic, I took the bus to my dad's apartment and decided to speak with the adoption attorney. The attorney set up the meeting and referred me to Sarah Weddington ...
McCorvey was homeless at the time and lived in a park. Weddington invited McCorvey to out to dinner and McCovey agreed because she wanted free food.[38] Ordinarily, lawyers are not allowed to directly solicit clients without any prior relationship, but McCorvey's situation qualified for a loophole in the no solicitation rule which allows lawyers to solicit new clients for public interest cases.[39] McCorvey asked if she had what was needed to be part of the Weddington and Coffee's lawsuit. She was told, "Yes. You're white. You're young, pregnant, and you want an abortion."[40]
The lawyers asked McCorvey if she thought abortion should be legal. McCorvey said she didn't know. Weddington told her, "It's just a piece of tissue. You just missed your period." This convinced McCorvey that abortion should be legal.[41] She agreed to let them represent her under the impression that she would be able to eventually get a legal abortion.[42] She smoked an illegal drug and drank wine so she wouldn't have to think about her pregnancy.[43] McCorvey gave birth to a daughter at Dallas Osteopathic Hospital on June 2, 1970; the baby was adopted by a couple in Texas.[44]
In 1970, Coffee and Weddington filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas on behalf of McCorvey under the legal pseudonym "Jane Roe". The defendant in the case was Dallas County District Attorney Henry Wade, who represented the State of Texas. Weddington later stated the lawsuit was "part of a much larger effort by many attorneys" whose collective interests she represented.[45]
Their forum shopping plan worked: one of the cases was assigned to the panel of judges which included the judge they thought would be sympathetic, so the two attorneys filed for both cases to be consolidated and heard by that panel.[46] McCorvey's lawsuit was heard by a three-judge panel consisting of district court judges Sarah T. Hughes and William McLaughlin Taylor Jr. and appellate judge Irving Loeb Goldberg of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.[47] Judge Hughes knew Coffee, who clerked for her from 1968–1969.[48] On June 17, 1970, the three judges unanimously[47] ruled in McCorvey's favor and declared the Texas law unconstitutional, finding that it violated the right to privacy found in the Ninth Amendment. In addition, the court relied on Justice Arthur Goldberg's 1965 concurrence in Griswold v. Connecticut. The court, however, declined to grant an injunction against enforcing the law.[49]
Hearing the case
Postponement
Roe v. Wade reached the Supreme Court on appeal in 1970. The justices delayed taking action on Roe and a closely related case, Doe v. Bolton, until they had first decided certain other cases. One case they decided first was Younger v. Harris. The justices felt the appeals raised difficult questions on judicial jurisdiction.
Another case was United States v. Vuitch, in which they considered the constitutionality of a District of Columbia statute which banned abortion except when the mother's life or health was endangered. The Court upheld the statue on the grounds that the word "health" was not unconstitutionally vague and placed the burden of proof concerning dangers to the life or health of the mother on the prosecutor instead of on the person who had performed the abortion.[50]
Justice William O. Douglas wrote a lengthy dissenting opinion to this case. He argued that the right to marital privacy and the limitation of family size from Griswold v. Connecticut also applied here, although he acknowledged that "on the other side is the belief of many that the fetus, once formed, is a member of the human family and that mere personal inconvenience cannot justify the fetus' destruction." He also challenged the majority opinion with a series of hypothetical questions asking whether "health" might also include the stigma of having an illegitimate child, anxiety from the pregnancy being unwanted, the physical work of raising a child, the financial drain from the added expense of another child, and far off health risks that may never actually materialize in a similar fashion to how risks were warded off with prophylactic appendectomy.[52] Justice Douglas's dissent made a similar legal argument to the one used two years later in Roe v. Wade.[53] The following day after their decision was announced, the court voted to hear both Roe and Doe.[54]
According to Justice Blackmun, Justice Stewart felt the cases were a straightforward application of Younger v. Harris, and enough justices agreed to hear the cases in order to review whether they would be suitable for federal as opposed to only state courts.[55] This sort of review was not about the constitutionality of abortion and would not have required evidence, witnesses, or a record of facts.[56] The oral argument was scheduled by the full Court for December 13, 1971. Before the Court could hear the oral argument, Justices Hugo Black and John Marshall Harlan II retired. Chief Justice Warren Burger asked Justice Potter Stewart and Justice Blackmun to determine whether Roe and Doe, among others, should be heard as scheduled. They recommended that the Court continue on as scheduled.[57]
Oral argument
As she began speaking for the oral argument, Sarah Weddington was unaware that the Court had decided to hear the case in order to decide which courts had jurisdiction to hear it rather than as an attempt to overturn abortion laws in a broad ruling. She began by bringing up constitutional reasons why the Court should overturn Texas's abortion law, but Justice Stewart asked questions directed towards the jurisdiction question instead. Weddington replied that she saw no problem with jurisdiction and continued to talk about a constitutional right to abortion.[58] Overall, she spent between 20 and 30 minutes discussing jurisdiction and procedure instead of constitutional issues.[55]
In his opening argument in defense of the abortion restrictions, attorney Jay Floyd made what was later described as the "worst joke in legal history".[59] Appearing against two female lawyers, Floyd began, "Mr. Chief Justice and may it please the Court. It's an old joke, but when a man argues against two beautiful ladies like this, they are going to have the last word." His remark was met with cold silence; one observer thought that Chief Justice Burger "was going to come right off the bench at him. He glared him down."[60][61]
McCorvey did not attend either of the oral arguments along with her two lawyers. After talking McCorvey out of getting an illegal abortion and getting her name signed on an affidavit for the lawsuit, Weddington did not speak again with McCorvey until four months after Roe was decided.[62]
Initial discussions
After the first argument session, Burger assigned the task of writing the Court's opinions for both Roe and Doe to Justice Blackmun.[63] Justice Douglas suggested to Justice Blackmun that Chief Justice Burger assigned the opinions to him out of malicious intention, but Justice Blackmun disagreed. He knew that Chief Justice Burger could not write it himself because the abortion was too controversial, and his opinions might get rejected by the majority. He also understood why the other justices could not be assigned to write the opinions: Justice Douglas was too liberal for the public to accept his word. Likewise, he might split the Court's vote by writing something radical. In addition, the quality of his opinions had suffered recently. Justice Brennan was the only Catholic on the Court, and he would would have to face Catholic political groups which were against abortion. If Justice Marshall wrote the opinions, the ruling would be perceived as being directed towards African Americans, and he would have to face the displeasure of African American political groups. Justice Stewart would have trouble going far enough in legalizing abortion.[64]
At this point, Justices Black and Harlan had been replaced by Justices William Rehnquist and Lewis F. Powell Jr., but the first argument had already occurred before they became Supreme Court justices.[65] Justice Blackmun worked on a preliminary opinion for Roe which argued that Texas's law was unconstitutionally vague.[63] This approach accommodated the claims of some doctors who were concerned that prosecutors might disagree with them over what constituted "life". Justice Blackmun thought this approach would be a good way to avoid controversy which would come with saying there was a fundamental right to abortion. Justices Brennan and Douglas disagreed with Justice Blackmun and wrote to him that instead he needed to focus on privacy.[66] After communicating with the other justices, Justice Blackmun felt that his opinion did not adequately reflect his liberal colleagues' views.[65] In March, 1972, the court issued a ruling in Eisenstadt v. Baird, a landmark case which applied the earlier marital privacy right now also to unmarried individuals.[67]
Justice Douglas wrote to Justice Blackmun in May 1972 that he thought there were four judges who were definitely willing to rule in the majority—himself, Justice Brennan, Justice Stewart, and Justice Marshall.[68] Justice Blackmun at one point thought all seven justices wanted to vote in the majority.[69]
In May 1972, Justice Blackmun proposed that the case be reargued. Justice Douglas threatened to write a dissent from the reargument order because he and the other liberal justices were suspicious that Justice Rehnquist and Justice Powell would vote to uphold the Texas abortion statutes. He was coaxed out of the action by his colleagues, and instead his dissent was merely mentioned in the reargument order without further statement or opinion.[70][71] The case was reargued on October 11, 1972. Weddington continued to represent the pseudonymous Jane Roe, and Texas Assistant Attorney General Robert C. Flowers replaced Jay Floyd for Texas.[72]
Drafting the opinion
Justice Blackmun continued to work on his opinions in both cases over the summer recess, even though there was no guarantee that he would be assigned to write them again. Over the recess, he spent a week researching the history of abortion at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, where he had worked in the 1950s. He talked daily on the phone with George Frampton, his 28-year old law clerk who stayed behind in Washington, D.C.[73] Frampton researched the history of abortion using a book authored by Lawrence Lader, the founding chairman of what is now called NARAL Pro-Choice America. Justice Blackmun's papers made available since his death contain at least seven citations[74] for Lader's 1966 book, Abortion.[73] Chapter 16 of his book, "A Blueprint for Changing U.S. Abortion Laws" predicted that if abortion were to be legalized, "the possibility of community opposition is slight".[75] Lader also predicted that "If such a theoretical case was carried to a high court, perhaps even the U.S. Supreme Court, and the judges confirmed a broad interpretation of the meaning of a threat to life, undoubtedly a landmark in abortion decisions would be reached."[76] After the Court held the second argument session, Justice Powell said he would agree with Justice Blackmun's conclusion but pushed for Roe to be the lead of the two abortion cases being considered. Justice Powell also suggested that the Court strike down the Texas law on privacy grounds. Byron White was unwilling to sign on to Justice Blackmun's opinion, and Justice Rehnquist had already decided to dissent.[77]
During the drafting process, the justices discussed the trimester framework at great length. Powell had suggested that the point where the state could intervene be placed at viability, which Justice Thurgood Marshall supported as well.[78] In an internal memo to the other justices before the majority decision was published, Justice Blackmun wrote: "You will observe that I have concluded that the end of the first trimester is critical. This is arbitrary, but perhaps any other selected point, such as quickening or viability, is equally arbitrary."[79] In the same memo he suggested that the end of the first trimester seemed more likely to get support from other justices and allowed states the ability to adjust their statutes. He was of the impression that doctors were concerned that recovering abortion patients would take up too many hospital beds, and that abortion patients later than the first trimester were more likely to require hospital beds than those whose fetuses were aborted earlier.[79] Contrary to the justices who preferred viability, Justice Douglas preferred the first-trimester line.[80] Justice Stewart said the lines were "legislative" and wanted more flexibility and consideration paid to state legislatures, though he joined Justice Blackmun's decision.[81] Justice William Brennan proposed abandoning frameworks based on the age of the fetus and instead allowing states to regulate the procedure based on its safety for the mother.[82]
Supreme Court decision
On January 22, 1973, the Supreme Court issued a 7–2 decision in favor of Norma McCorvey ("Jane Roe") holding that women in the United States had a fundamental right to choose whether to have abortions without excessive government restriction and striking down Texas's abortion ban as unconstitutional. The decision was issued together with a companion case, Doe v. Bolton, that involved a similar challenge to Georgia's abortion laws.
Opinion of the Court
Seven justices formed the majority and joined an opinion written by Justice Harry Blackmun. The opinion recited the facts of the case, then dealt with issues of procedure and justiciability before proceeding to the main constitutional issues of the case.
Mootness
The Court's opinion first addressed mootness, a legal doctrine which bars American federal courts from hearing cases that have ceased to be "live" controversies because of intervening events.[83] Under a normal application of the principle, McCorvey's appeal had become moot because she had already given birth to her child and no longer had a pregnancy to abort.[84]
The Court concluded that an established exception to the mootness doctrine allows consideration of cases that are "capable of repetition, yet evading review".[85] Blackmun noted that the woman using the name Roe might get pregnant again, and pregnancy would normally conclude more quickly than an appellate process: "If that termination makes a case moot, pregnancy litigation seldom will survive much beyond the trial stage, and appellate review will be effectively denied."[86]
Abortion and right to privacy
After dealing with mootness and standing, the Court proceeded to the main issue of the case: the constitutionality of Texas's abortion law. The Court first surveyed abortion's legal status throughout the history of Roman law and the Anglo-American common law.[5] It also reviewed the developments of medical procedures and technology used in abortions.[5]
After its historical survey, the Court introduced the concept of a constitutional "right to privacy" that it said had been intimated in its earlier decisions Meyer v. Nebraska and Pierce v. Society of Sisters, which involved parental control over childrearing, and in Griswold v. Connecticut, which involved the use of contraception.[5] Then, "with virtually no further explanation of the privacy value",[6] the Court ruled that regardless of exactly which of its provisions were involved, the U.S. Constitution's guarantees of liberty covered a right to privacy that protected a pregnant woman's decision whether to abort a pregnancy.[87]
This right of privacy, whether it be founded in the Fourteenth Amendment's concept of personal liberty and restrictions upon state action, as we feel it is, or ... in the Ninth Amendment's reservation of rights to the people, is broad enough to encompass a woman's decision whether to terminate her pregnancy.
— Roe, 410 U.S. at 153.[88]
The Court reasoned that outlawing abortions would infringe a pregnant woman's right to privacy for several reasons: having unwanted children "may force upon the woman a distressful life and future"; it may bring imminent psychological harm; caring for the child may tax the mother's physical and mental health; and because there may be "distress, for all concerned, associated with the unwanted child".[89]
But the Court rejected the notion that this right to privacy was absolute.[5] It held instead that the abortion right must be balanced against other government interests.[90] Two government interests were held to be sufficiently "compelling" to permit states to impose some limitations on pregnant women's right to choose to have an abortion: first, protecting the mother's health, and second, protecting the life of the fetus.[90]
A State may properly assert important interests in safeguarding health, maintaining medical standards, and in protecting potential life. At some point in pregnancy, these respective interests become sufficiently compelling to sustain regulation of the factors that govern the abortion decision. ... We, therefore, conclude that the right of personal privacy includes the abortion decision, but that this right is not unqualified and must be considered against important state interests in regulation.
— Roe, 410 U.S. at 154.
Texas's lawyers had argued that limiting abortion to situations where the mother's life was in danger was justified because life began at the moment of conception, and therefore the state's governmental interest in protecting prenatal life applied to all pregnancies regardless of their stage.[6] The Court said that there was no indication that the Constitution's uses of the word "person" were meant to include fetuses, and it rejected Texas's argument that a fetus should be considered a "person" with a legal and constitutional right to life.[90] The Court observed that there was still great disagreement over when an unborn fetus becomes a living being.[91]
We need not resolve the difficult question of when life begins. When those trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, in this point in the development of man's knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the answer.
— Roe, 410 U.S. at 159.[92]
To balance women's rights to privacy and state governments' interests in protecting mothers' health and prenatal life, the Court created a framework based on the three trimesters of pregnancy. During the first trimester, when it was believed that the procedure was safer than childbirth, the Court ruled that a state government could place no restrictions on women's ability to choose to abort pregnancies other than imposing minimal medical safeguards, such as requiring abortions to be performed by licensed physicians.[6] From the second trimester on, the Court ruled that evidence of increasing risks to the mother's health gave states a compelling interest that allowed them to enact medical regulations on abortion procedures so long as they were reasonable and "narrowly tailored" to protecting mothers' health.[6] From the beginning of the third trimester on—the point at which a fetus became viable under the medical technology available in the early 1970s—the Court ruled that a state's interest in protecting prenatal life became so compelling that it could legally prohibit all abortions except where necessary to protect the mother's life or health.[6]
Having completed its analysis, the Court concluded that Texas's abortion statutes were unconstitutional and struck them down.
A state criminal abortion statute of the current Texas type, that excepts from criminality only a life-saving procedure on behalf of the mother, without regard to pregnancy stage and without recognition of the other interests involved, is violative of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
— Roe, 410 U.S. at 164.
Concurrences
Three justices from the majority filed concurring opinions in the case. Justice Potter Stewart wrote a concurring opinion in which he said that even though the Constitution makes no mention of the right to choose to have an abortion without interference, he thought the Court's decision was a permissible interpretation of the doctrine of substantive due process, which says that the Due Process Clause's protection of liberty extends beyond simple procedures and protects certain fundamental rights.[93][6] Justice William O. Douglas's concurring opinion described his view that although the Court was correct to find that the right to choose to have an abortion was a fundamental right, he thought it would have been better to derive it from the Ninth Amendment—which states that the fact that a right is not specifically enumerated in the Constitution shall not be construed to mean that American people do not possess it—rather than through the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process Clause.[93][6]
Chief Justice Warren Burger wrote a concurrence in which he wrote that he thought it would be permissible to allow a state to require two physicians to certify an abortion before it could be performed.[93] His concurrence also states:[94]
I do not read the Court's holdings today as having the sweeping consequences attributed to them by the dissenting Justices; the dissenting views discount the reality that the vast majority of physicians observe the standards of their profession, and act only on the basis of carefully deliberated medical judgments relating to life and health. Plainly, the Court today rejects any claim that the Constitution requires abortions on demand.
This has been interpreted as Chief Justice Burger thinking that medical standards and judgment would restrict the number of abortions. Instead of the law restricting abortions to limited circumstances as pre-Roe, now doctors would get do the restricting.[95]
This understanding of Roe appears to be related to several statements in the majority opinion.[96] Justice Blackmun's majority opinion states, "the attending physician, in consultation with his patient, is free to determine, without regulation by the state, that, in his medical judgment, the patient's pregnancy should be terminated."[97] It also states, "For the stage, prior to approximately the end of the first trimester, the abortion decision and its effectuation must be left to the medical judgment of the pregnant woman's attending physician."[98] Six days prior to January 22, Justice Blackmun prepared "a transcript of what I shall say, and there should be at least some reason for the press not going all the way off the deep end."[99] The unissued news release stated:[80][99]
... the Court does not today hold that the Constitution compels abortion on demand. It does not today pronounce that a pregnant woman has an absolute right to abortion. It does, for the first trimester of pregnancy, cast the abortion decision and the responsibility for it upon the attending physician.
These statements appear to indicate that the justices voting in the majority thought that patients had personal physicians. Earlier in American history it was once common for people to have individual doctors, but the nature of doctor-patient relationship had already changed prior to Roe.[100]
Dissents
Justices Byron White and William Rehnquist dissented from the Court's decision.[6] Justice Rehnquist wrote his own dissent for Roe[101] and also joined Justice White's dissent,[102] which was issued with Roe's companion case, Doe v. Bolton. Justice White's dissent stated that the Court had no basis for deciding between the competing values of pregnant women and unborn children.
I find nothing in the language or history of the Constitution to support the Court's judgment. The Court simply fashions and announces a new constitutional right for pregnant women and, with scarcely any reason or authority for its action, invests that right with sufficient substance to override most existing state abortion statutes. The upshot is that the people and the legislatures of the 50 States are constitutionally disentitled to weigh the relative importance of the continued existence and development of the fetus, on the one hand, against a spectrum of possible impacts on the woman, on the other hand. As an exercise of raw judicial power, the Court perhaps has authority to do what it does today; but, in my view, its judgment is an improvident and extravagant exercise of the power of judicial review that the Constitution extends to this Court.
— Doe, 410 U.S. at 221–22 (White, J., dissenting).[103]
Justice White argued that abortion, "for the most part, should be left with the people and the political processes the people have devised to govern their affairs."[104]
Justice Rehnquist's dissent compared the majority's use of substantive due process to the Court's repudiated use of the doctrine in the 1905 case Lochner v. New York.[6] He elaborated on several of Justice White's points and asserted that the Court's historical analysis was flawed:
To reach its result, the Court necessarily has had to find within the scope of the Fourteenth Amendment a right that was apparently completely unknown to the drafters of the Amendment. As early as 1821, the first state law dealing directly with abortion was enacted by the Connecticut Legislature. By the time of the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868, there were at least 36 laws enacted by state or territorial legislatures limiting abortion. While many States have amended or updated their laws, 21 of the laws on the books in 1868 remain in effect today.
From the actual historical record, Justice Rehnquist concluded, "There apparently was no question concerning the validity of this provision or of any of the other state statutes when the Fourteenth Amendment was adopted." Because of this, "the drafters did not intend to have the Fourteenth Amendment withdraw from the States the power to legislate with respect to this matter."[108]
False rape claim
Prior to filing the lawsuit, McCorvey claimed to an unidentified lawyer[109] and to Weddington and Coffee that she had been raped.[110]
The complaint submitted by attorneys for plaintiff-intervenor James Hubert Hallford stated that he had one or more prospective abortion patients who had sought an abortion for a pregnancy resulting from rape.[111] Hallford faulted the Texas abortion laws for not making an exception for rape.[112]
"Rape" is not mentioned in the affidavit for the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas[113] or the description of merits in the majority opinion.[47]
During the first oral argument, Weddington stated, "Regardless of the circumstances of conception, whether it was because of rape, incest, whether she is extremely immature, she has no relief."[114] Later during the argument, Justice Stewart asked "Texas doesn't grant any exemption in the case of a rape, where the woman's pregnancy has resulted from rape–either statutory or otherwise-does it?"[115] In response, Floyd said, "There is nothing in our statute about that."[115] Justice Stewart continued, "And such a woman wouldn't have had a choice, would she?"[116] In response, Floyd said,[116]
The procedure — and now I'm telling the Court something that's outside the record — as I understand, the procedure when a woman is brought in after a rape, is to try to stop whatever has occurred, immediately, by the proper procedure in the hospital. Immediately she's taken there, if she reports it immediately. But, no, there is nothing in the statute ...
During the second oral argument, Weddington described that some states permitted abortion for rape, but also stated "that it has not yet been determined whether the State has the compelling interest to uphold even that kind of regulation."[117]
Rape is mentioned twice in the overall majority opinion[118] and the subject of abortion in the case of rape is part of the concurrences by Chief Justice Burger[94] and Justice Douglas.[119]
After learning about the decision in Roe, McCorvey was scared that if her lie about being raped was ever found out, she might go to jail and the decision might be overturned.[120]
In 1983, McCorvey described the rape incident to Lloyd Shearer for Parade magazine.[121] In 1987, she admitted that she had lied about being raped to Carl Rowan during an interview on WUSA-TV.[122][123] Instead she was impregnated "through what I thought was love".[123]
Although during the 1987 interview McCorvey claimed the purpose of her lie was to exploit what she wrongly thought was an exception in Texas law, in her 1994 memoir written for a pro-abortion rights audience she stated that the initial reason for her lie to Weddington and Coffee was because she felt Coffee and Weddington were uncomfortable with her sexual history and were concerned that McCorvey was too weird, too dangerous, and would end up hurting them. Instead, she wanted to make it seem like she deserved an abortion.[110] Earlier several women had told McCorvey "that the way to get an abortion was to say that I had been raped." This suggestion motivated McCorvey's earlier lie to the unidentified lawyer.[109]
A 1987 news release issued by WUSA-TV quoted Weddington, who said she had never "touched the issue of rape and only emphasized the question of whether the Constitution gives to the state or leaves to a woman the questions of what she can or must do with her body."[123]
In 1998, McCorvey testified before a Senate subcommittee: "The affidavit submitted to the Supreme Court didn't happen the way I said it did. Pure and simple, I lied. Sarah Weddington and Linda Coffey needed an extreme case to make their client look pitiful. Rape seemed to be the ticket; what made the rape even worse, a gang rape. It all started out as a little lie, but my little lie grew and became more horrible with each telling."[124]
In 2003, McCorvey signed an affidavit for the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division. It stated[125]
Later, Weddington and Coffee presented the affidavit for my signature at Coffee's office. I told them that I trusted them and that I did not need to read the affidavit before I signed it. I never read the affidavit before signing it and do not, to this very day, know what is written in the affidavit. Both Weddington and Coffee were aware that I did not read the affidavit before I signed it. At no time did they tell me that I had to read it before they accepted my signature.
In 2005, McCorvey testified again before the same Senate subcommittee: "I wanted to justify my desire for an abortion in my own mind, as almost every woman who participates in the killing of her own child must also do. I made up the story that I had been raped to help justify my abortion. Why would I make up a lie to justify my conduct? Abortion itself is a lie and it is based on lies."[126]
Reception
There was a strong response to the decision shortly after it was issued.[127] The most prominent organized groups which responded to Roe are NARAL Pro-Choice America and the National Right to Life Committee.
Support for Roe
Along with support for abortion rights
In the 1960s, there was an alliance between the population control and abortion rights movements.[129] Abortion rights were especially supported by younger women within the population control movement.[130] Mostly the cooperation was due to feminists who wanted some of the popularity already enjoyed by the population control movement. In addition, population control advocates thought that legalizing abortion would help solve the coming population crisis which demographers had projected.[129]
In 1973, Hugh Moore's Population Crisis Committee and John Rockefeller III's Population Council both publicly supported abortion rights following Roe.[131] Previously public support for abortion rights within the population control movement instead came from less established organizations such as Zero Population Growth.[132] An exception was Planned Parenthood-World Population, which supported repealing all laws against abortion in 1969.[133]
Together, population control and abortion rights advocates voiced the benefits of legalized abortion such as smaller welfare costs, fewer illegitimate births, and slower population growth.[129] At the same time, the use of these arguments put them at odds with civil rights leaders and black-power activists who were concerned that abortion would be used to eliminate non-whites.[129] H. Rap Brown denounced abortion as "black genocide"[134] and Dick Gregory said that his "answer to genocide, quite simply, is eight Black kids and another one on the way."[135]
Soon after Roe, the population control movement suffered setbacks which caused the movement to lose politically support and instead appear divisive.[136] On June 27, 1973, a lawsuit was filed concerning 14-year old Minnie Lee Relf and her 12-year old sister Alice Lee. A worker at a federally funded family planning clinic lied to their illiterate mother, saying they would get birth control shots. Instead, the Relf sisters were sterilized without their knowledge or consent.[137] During the next fifteen months, 80 additional women came forward about their forced sterilizations, all belonging to minority races. Concerns rose that abortions would also become compulsory.[138] During the 1974 World Population Conference in Bucharest, Hungary, most developing nations argued that the developed nations' focus on population growth was an attempt to avoid solving the deeper causes of underdevelopment, such as the unequal structure of international relations.[139] Instead, they wanted more favorable terms under the New International Economic Order. A draft plan with fertility targets was strongly opposed by the developing countries, which surprised the delegations from the United States, Canada, and Great Britain.[139] The final plan omitted fertility targets and instead stated that "A population policy may have a certain success if it constitutes an integral part of socio-economic development".[140]
In response, the abortion rights movement distanced itself from the population control movement as members questioned the political benefits of population control rhetoric.[141] In October 1973, Robin Elliott circulated a memo to other Planned Parenthood members concerning opposition to "Planned Parenthood's credibility in its reference to the population problem".[141] Instead, she thought they should use Roe inspired rhetoric about "the reaffirmation of commitment to freedom of choice in parenthood."[141] By 1978, a NARAL handbook denounced population control.[142]
Today, advocates of Roe describe it as vital to the preservation of women's rights, personal freedom, bodily integrity, and privacy. Advocates have also reasoned that access to safe abortion and reproductive freedom generally are fundamental rights. Supporters of Roe contend that even if abortion rights are also supported by another portion of the constitution, the decision in 1973 accurately founds the right in the Fourteenth Amendment. Others support Roe despite concern that the fundamental right to abortion is found elsewhere in the Constitution but not in the portions referenced in the 1973 decision.[143][144]
Support for Roe, but opposition to legalized abortion
Opinion polls indicate that a sizable minority of the American population opposes overturning Roe, but also desires to make abortion illegal in ways that Roe does not permit. This is attributed to poll respondents misunderstanding Roe v. Wade or misinterpreting the poll question.[145]
Opposition to Roe
Opposition to Roe, but support for abortion rights
Some supporters of abortion rights oppose Roe v. Wade on the grounds that it laid a foundation for abortion in civil rights rather than in human rights, which are broader and would require government entities to take active measures to ensure every woman has access to abortion.[146] This particular position is indicated by the use of rhetoric concerning "reproductive justice" which replaces earlier rhetoric centered around "choice", such as the "pro-choice" label.[147] Reproductive justice proponents contend that factors permitting choice are unequal, thus perpetuating oppression and serving to divide women.[148] Reproductive justice advocates instead want abortion to be considered an affirmative right that the government would be obligated to guarantee equal access to, even if the women seeking abortions are nonwhite, poor, or live outside major metropolitan areas.[149] With a broader interpretation of the right to an abortion, it would be possible to require all new obstetricians to be in favor of abortion rights, lest as professionals they employ conscience clauses and refuse to perform abortions.[150] In 1989, the decision in Webster v. Reproductive Health Services ruled against an affirmative right to nontherapeutic abortions and noted that states would not be required to pay for them.[151]
Some in academia have equated the denial of abortion rights to compulsory motherhood, and because of this abortion bans violate the Thirteenth Amendment:
When women are compelled to carry and bear children, they are subjected to 'involuntary servitude' in violation of the Thirteenth Amendment. Even if the woman has stipulated to have consented to the risk of pregnancy, that does not permit the state to force her to remain pregnant.[143]
In 1993, a district court rejected an attempt to justify abortion rights apart from Roe and instead upon the basis that pregnancy and childrearing constituted "involuntary servitude".[152]
Opposition to both Roe and abortion
Every year, on the anniversary of the decision, opponents of abortion march up Constitution Avenue to the Supreme Court Building in Washington, D.C., in the March for Life.[153] Around 250,000 people attended the march until 2010.[154][155] Estimates put the 2011 and 2012 attendances at 400,000 each,[156] and the 2013 March for Life drew an estimated 650,000 people.[157]
Opponents of Roe assert that the decision lacks a valid constitutional foundation.[158] Like the dissenters in Roe, they maintain that the Constitution is silent on the issue, and that proper solutions to the question would best be found via state legislatures and the legislative process, rather than through an all-encompassing ruling from the Supreme Court.[159]
A prominent argument against the Roe decision is that, in the absence of consensus about when meaningful life begins, it is best to avoid the risk of doing harm.[160]
In response to Roe v. Wade, most states enacted or attempted to enact laws limiting or regulating abortion, such as laws requiring parental consent or parental notification for minors to obtain abortions; spousal mutual consent laws; spousal notification laws; laws requiring abortions to be performed in hospitals, not clinics; laws barring state funding for abortions; laws banning intact dilation and extraction, also known as partial-birth abortion; laws requiring waiting periods before abortions; and laws mandating that women read certain types of literature and watch a fetal ultrasound before undergoing an abortion.[161] In 1976, Congress passed the Hyde Amendment, barring the federal government from using Medicaid to fund abortions except in cases of rape, incest, or a threat to the life of the mother. The Supreme Court struck down some state restrictions in a long series of cases stretching from the mid-1970s to the late 1980s, but upheld restrictions on funding, including the Hyde Amendment, in the case of Harris v. McRae (1980).[162]
Some opponents of abortion maintain that personhood begins at fertilization or conception, and should therefore be protected by the Constitution;[144] the dissenting justices in Roe instead wrote that decisions about abortion "should be left with the people and to the political processes the people have devised to govern their affairs."[163]
Responses within the legal profession
Liberal and feminist legal scholars have had various reactions to Roe, not always giving the decision unqualified support. One argument is that Justice Blackmun reached the correct result but went about it the wrong way.[164] Another is that the end achieved by Roe does not justify its means of judicial fiat.[165]
David Garrow noted that the decision in Roe (and also Doe v. Bolton) "owed a great amount of their substance and language" to Justice Blackmun's law clerks, George Frampton and Randall Bezanson. He thought the extent of their contributions were remarkable, and that the clerks exhibited an "unusually assertive and forceful manner" in voicing their views to Justice Blackmun. In his research it was the earliest significant example he found of this behavior pattern, which grew more consistent later on. In Garrow's evaluation, the clerks' contributions were "historically significant and perhaps decisive" in shaping the two decisions.[167]
In response to Garrow, Edward Lazarus noted that Justice Blackmun's later clerks like himself did not need as much direction on reproductive rights since they had Justice Blackmun's prior opinions to draw from. Lazarus thought that on at least some occasions when legal formulations were created for opinions to be published in Justice Blackmun's name, the justice himself was not engaged in originating every significant thought pattern that they employed. Lazarus agreed that Garrow's depiction[167] of how the trimester framework came about was an example of one of these occasions. He concluded:
The problem of excessive clerk delegation was less serious in Blackmun's chambers than Garrow suggests but is also more commonplace among the justices. The modern Supreme Court has deep problems in its decisional culture and the overuse of law clerks is an aspect of this.[168]
Justice John Paul Stevens, while agreeing with the decision, has suggested that it should have been more narrowly focused on the issue of privacy. According to Stevens, if the decision had avoided the trimester framework and simply stated that the right to privacy included a right to choose abortion, "it might have been much more acceptable" from a legal standpoint.[169] Before joining the Court, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg criticized the decision for venturing "too far in the change it ordered."[170] Had the decision been limited in scope to only permit abortion during certain circumstances, "physicians might have been less pleased with the decision, but the legislative trend might have continued in the direction in which it was headed".[171] After becoming a Supreme Court justice, Ginsburg faulted the Court's approach for being "about a doctor's freedom to practice his profession as he thinks best ... It wasn't woman-centered. It was physician-centered."[172] Justice Ginsburg thought that Roe was originally intended to complement Medicaid funding for abortions, but this did not happen.[173] She stated about Harris v. McRae, which upheld restrictions on Medicaid abortion funding:[173]
Yes, the ruling about that surprised me. Frankly I had thought that at the time Roe was decided, there was concern about population growth and particularly growth in populations that we don't want to have too many of. So that Roe was going to be then set up for Medicaid funding for abortion. Which some people felt would risk coercing women into having abortions when they didn't really want them. But when the court decided McRae, the case came out the other way. And then I realized that my perception of it had been altogether wrong.
Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox thought the "failure to confront the issue in principled terms leaves the opinion to read like a set of hospital rules and regulations whose validity is good enough this week but will be destroyed with new statistics upon the medical risks of child birth and abortion or new advances in providing for the separate existence of a fetus. Neither historian, nor layman, nor lawyer will be persuaded that all the prescriptions of Justice Blackmun are part of the Constitution."[174]
In a highly cited Yale Law Journal article published in the months after the decision,[8] the American legal scholar John Hart Ely strongly criticized Roe as a decision that was disconnected from American constitutional law.[175]
What is frightening about Roe is that this super-protected right is not inferable from the language of the Constitution, the framers' thinking respecting the specific problem in issue, any general value derivable from the provisions they included, or the nation's governmental structure. ... The problem with Roe is not so much that it bungles the question it sets itself, but rather that it sets itself a question the Constitution has not made the Court's business. ... [Roe] is bad because it is bad constitutional law, or rather because it is not constitutional law and gives almost no sense of an obligation to try to be.[176]
American constitutional law scholar Laurence Tribe had similar thoughts: "One of the most curious things about Roe is that, behind its own verbal smokescreen, the substantive judgment on which it rests is nowhere to be found."[177] Liberal law professors Alan Dershowitz,[178] Cass Sunstein,[179] and Kermit Roosevelt have also expressed disappointment with Roe v. Wade.[180]
Jeffrey Rosen[181] and Michael Kinsley[182] echo Ginsburg, arguing that a legislative movement would have been the correct way to build a more durable consensus in support of abortion rights. William Saletan wrote, "Blackmun's papers vindicate every indictment of Roe: invention, overreach, arbitrariness, textual indifference."[183] Benjamin Wittes has written that Roe "disenfranchised millions of conservatives on an issue about which they care deeply."[184] And Edward Lazarus, a former Blackmun clerk who "loved Roe's author like a grandfather," wrote: "As a matter of constitutional interpretation and judicial method, Roe borders on the indefensible. ... Justice Blackmun's opinion provides essentially no reasoning in support of its holding. And in the almost 30 years since Roe's announcement, no one has produced a convincing defense of Roe on its own terms."[185]
Richard Epstein thought that the majority opinion relied on a book written by William Lloyd Prosser about tort law when it stated, that it "is said" that recovery of damages was allowed "only if the fetus was viable, or at least quick, when the injuries were sustained".[186] He compared this to what was actually written[187] in the book, which was that "when actually faced with the issue for decision, almost all of the jurisdictions have allowed recovery even though the injury occurred during the early weeks of pregnancy, when the child was neither viable nor quick."[188]
The assertion that the Supreme Court was making a legislative decision is often repeated by opponents of the ruling.[189] The "viability" criterion is still in effect, although the point of viability has changed as medical science has found ways to help premature babies survive.[190]
Later responses by those involved
Harry Blackmun
Justice Blackmun, who authored the Roe decision, subsequently had mixed feelings about his role in the case. During a 1974 television interview, he stated that Roe "will be regarded as one of the worst mistakes in the court's history or one of its great decisions, a turning point."[191]
In a 1983 interview for a newspaper journalist, he responded that he was "mildly annoyed at those, law professors included, who personalize it" because "it was a decision of the court, not my decision. There were seven votes." As a Methodist, he felt hurt that Methodist pastors wrote condemning letters to him, but as time past by, the letters did not hurt "as much anymore". In defense he responded, "People misunderstand. I am not for abortion. I hope my family never has to face such a decision", noting that "I still think it was a correct decision" because "we were deciding a constitutional issue, not a moral one."[192]
He described Roe as a "a no-win case" and predicted that, "fifty years from now, depending on the fate of the proposed constitutional amendment, abortion probably will not be as great a legal issue. I think it will continue to be a moral issue, however."[191] He reflected that his role in the decision meant he was most known as the "author of the abortion decision". His response was that "we all pick up tags. I'll carry this one to my grave" and "so be it".[192]
In 1987, Justice Blackmun explained in a letter to Chief Justice Rehnquist:[193]
I remember that the old Chief appointed a screening committee, chaired by Potter, to select those cases that could (it was assumed) be adequately heard by a Court of seven. I was on that little committee. We did not do a good job. Potter pressed for Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton to be heard and did so in the misapprehension that they involved nothing more than an application of Younger v. Harris. How wrong we were.
In 1991, he regretted how the Court decided to hear Roe and Doe in a televised interview: It was a serious mistake ... We did a poor job. I think the committee should have deferred them until we had a full Court."[194]
In 1992 he stood by the analytical framework he established in Roe during the subsequent Casey case.[195] He often gave speeches and lectures promoting Roe v. Wade and criticizing Roe's critics.[196]
Norma McCorvey
During the 1970s although some years after Roe, Norma McCorvey had a nightmare concerning "little babies lying around with daggers in their hearts". This was the first of a series of recurring nightmares which kept her awake at night.[197] She became worried and wondered, "What really, had I done?"[198] and "Well, how do they kill a baby inside a mother's stomach anyway?" McCorvey later reflected:[199]
I couldn't get the thought out of my mind. I realize it sounds very naïve, especially for a woman who had already conceived and delivered three children. Though I had seen and experienced more than my share of the world, there were some things about which I still didn't have a clue—and this was one of them. Ironically enough, Jane Roe may have known less about abortion than anyone else.
After years of working with and accompanying others in the abortion rights movement, Norma McCorvey became part of the movement against abortion from 1995 until shortly before her death in 2017.[200] In 1998, she testified to Congress:
It was my pseudonym, Jane Roe, which had been used to create the "right" to abortion out of legal thin air. But Sarah Weddington and Linda Coffee never told me that what I was signing would allow women to come up to me 15, 20 years later and say, "Thank you for allowing me to have my five or six abortions. Without you, it wouldn't have been possible." Sarah never mentioned women using abortions as a form of birth control. We talked about truly desperate and needy women, not women already wearing maternity clothes.[201]
In 2002, along with Sandra Cano (Mary Doe) from Doe v. Bolton and Bernard Nathanson, a co-founder of NARAL Pro-Choice America, McCorvey appeared in a television advertisement intended to get the Bush administration to nominate members to the Supreme Court who would oppose abortion.[202]
As a party to the original litigation, she sought to reopen the case in U.S. District Court in Texas to have Roe v. Wade overturned. However, the Fifth Circuit decided that her case was moot, in McCorvey v. Hill.[203] In a concurring opinion, Judge Edith Jones agreed that McCorvey was raising legitimate questions about emotional and other harm suffered by women who have had abortions, about increased resources available for the care of unwanted children, and about new scientific understanding of fetal development. However, Jones said she was compelled to agree that the case was moot.[204][205] On February 22, 2005, the Supreme Court refused to grant a writ of certiorari, and McCorvey's appeal ended.[206]
In an interview shortly before her death, McCorvey stated that she had taken an anti-abortion position because she had been paid to do so and that her campaign against abortion had been an act. She also stated that it did not matter to her if women wanted to have an abortion and they should be free to choose.[207][208] Rob Schenck, a Methodist pastor and activist who once had anti-abortion views stated that he and others helped entice McCorvey to claim she changed sides and also stated that what they had done with her was "highly unethical" and he had "profound regret" over the matter.[209]
Following this interview, McCorvey talked positively with a priest she knew well about a message she wanted him to convey at the next March for Life. The message concerned encouraging young people to oppose abortion. The priest, Frank Pavone, reflected after her death that "There was no indication whatsoever, at the end of her life" that she had given up her pro-life positions.[210]
McCorvey's third child
In 2021, Shelley Thornton, McCorvey's third child who did not get aborted because the court proceedings took too long, stated she was neither pro-life or pro-choice. She grew up not knowing that she was the fetus in the Roe case until her birth mother appeared on the Today show in 1989 and talked about her desire to meet her daughter. In response, a journalist for the National Enquirer found Thornton as a teenager and told so her about her prenatal history. This made her very sad. In 1991, Thornton became pregnant, and did not have an abortion because abortion was "not part of who I was". By 2021, she had met her two half-siblings, but not her birth mother. She nearly met her birth mother in 1994, but on the phone, McCorvey told her that she should have thanked her for not having an abortion. Thornton's visceral reaction was "What! I'm supposed to thank you for getting knocked up ... and then giving me away?" She told her birth mother that she "would never, ever thank her for not aborting me".[211] She reflected that "When someone's pregnant with a baby, and they don't want that baby, that person develops knowing they're not wanted."[212]
Sarah Weddington
After arguing in Roe v. Wade at the age of 26, Sarah Weddington was elected to the Texas House of Representatives for three terms. Weddington also was general counsel for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, an assistant to President Jimmy Carter,[213] lecturer at the Texas Wesleyan University School of Law, and speaker and adjunct professor at the University of Texas at Austin.[214]
In a 1993 speech for the Institute for Educational Ethics in Oklahoma, Weddington discussed her conduct during Roe and stated, "My conduct may not have been totally ethical. But I did it for what I thought were good reasons."[215]
In 1998, she said that the lack of doctors to abort fetuses could undermine Roe: "When I look back on the decision, I thought these words had been written in granite. But I've learned it was not granite. It was more like sandstone. The immediate problem is, where will the doctors come from?"[216] Weddington died on December 26, 2021.[217]
Role in judicial decisions
Two months after the decision in Roe, the Court issued a ruling about school funding in San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez.[218] The majority opinion cited Roe v. Wade to assert that privacy itself was a fundamental right, while procreation implicitly counted as "among the rights of personal privacy protected under the Constitution."[219] In his dissenting opinion, Justice Thurgood Marshall stated that Roe v. Wade "reaffirmed its initial decision in Buck v. Bell", and noted where Buck was cited in Roe.[220] He found Roe to be a continuation of the Court's practice of granting only a limited stature to the right to procreate,[221] since the Court's decision treated procreation as less important than the right to privacy.[220] He observed that although past decisions showed strong concern against the state discriminating against certain groups concerning procreation and certain other rights, the "Court has never said or indicated that these are interests which independently enjoy full-blown constitutional protection."[222] Instead, in Roe, "the importance of procreation has indeed been explained on the basis of its intimate relationship with the constitutional right of privacy ..."[220] Justice Marshall thought that the method used in Rodriguez for determining which rights were more fundamental was wrong, and proposed a different method which would result in procreation receiving greater legal protection.[223]
The legal interaction between Roe v Wade, the Fourteenth Amendment as understood post-Roe, and changing medical technology and standards caused the development of civil suits for wrongful birth and wrongful life claims.[224] Not all states permit a parent to sue for wrongful birth[225] or a child to sue for wrongful life.[226] The constitutionality of wrongful life claims is controversial within the legal profession, even for states which currently allow them.[227] Pre-Roe, a state court dismissed a lawsuit making both a wrongful birth and life claim, which was unsuccessfully appealed to the Supreme Court of New Jersey.[228]
Prior to Roe, the Chancery Division of the Superior Court of New Jersey found that a pregnant Jehovah's Witness woman could be ordered to submit to lifesaving blood transfusions due to the state's compelling interest "to save her life and the life of her unborn child."[229] The Court appointed a legal guardian to represent the unborn child, and ordered the guardian to consent to blood transfusions and to "seek such other relief as may be necessary to preserve the lives of the mother and the child".[229] After Roe, the Fifth District Appellate Court in Illinois ruled that medical professionals had wrongly transfused blood into a pregnant Jehovah's Witness woman on the basis from Roe that the "state's important and legitimate interest becomes compelling at viability" and her fetus was not yet viable.[230][231]
President Reagan, who supported legislative restrictions on abortion, began making federal judicial appointments in 1981. Reagan denied that there was any litmus test: "I have never given a litmus test to anyone that I have appointed to the bench ... . I feel very strongly about those social issues, but I also place my confidence in the fact that the one thing that I do seek are judges that will interpret the law and not write the law. We've had too many examples in recent years of courts and judges legislating."[232]
In addition to Justices White and Rehnquist, Reagan-appointee Justice Sandra Day O'Connor began dissenting from the Court's abortion cases, arguing in 1983 that the trimester-based analysis devised by the Roe Court was "unworkable."[233] Shortly before his retirement, Chief Justice Warren Burger suggested in 1986 that Roe be "reexamined";[234] the associate justice who filled Burger's place on the Court—Justice Antonin Scalia—vigorously opposed Roe. Concern about overturning Roe played a major role in the defeat of Robert Bork's nomination to the Court in 1987; the man eventually appointed to replace Roe-supporter Justice Lewis Powell was Justice Anthony Kennedy.
The justices voting in the majority on the Federal Constitutional Court in pre-unification West Germany rejected the trimester framework in the German Constitutional Court abortion decision, 1975 on the basis that development during pregnancy is a continuous whole rather than made up of three trimesters. The Court found that the right to life extends also to the unborn and that life begins on the fourteenth day after conception.[235] It also found that the liberties of pregnant mothers were qualified by the existence of another life inside them. The Court found that "A compromise which guarantees the protection of the life of the one about to be born and permits the pregnant woman the freedom of abortion is not possible since the interruption of pregnancy always means the destruction of the unborn life."[236] It ruled that the fetus must be protected, and the first responsibility for this lies with the mother, with a second responsibility in the hands of the legislature.[237] The Court allowed for a balancing of rights between the mother and unborn child, but required that the rights of each be considered within a framework which acknowledged the supreme, fundamental value of human life. Legislation allowing abortion could be constitutional if the rights of the unborn persons were acknowledged in this manner.[238]
Two minority justices in the ruling for the German Constitutional Court abortion decision in 1975 remarked that "the Supreme Court of the United States has even regarded punishment for the interruption of pregnancy, performed by a physician with the consent of the pregnant woman in the first third of pregnancy, as a violation of fundamental rights. This would, according to German constitutional law, go too far indeed."[236]
In 1988, the Supreme Court of Canada used the rulings in both Roe and Doe v. Bolton as grounds to find Canada's federal law limiting abortions to certified hospitals unconstitutional in R. v. Morgentaler.[239]
Planned Parenthood v. Danforth
In Planned Parenthood v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52 (1976), [240] the plaintiffs challenged a Missouri statute which regulated abortion. In the regulations for abortions on demand, the state required prior written consent from a parent if the patient was a minor or a spouse if the patient was married. For pregnancies at 12 weeks and later, the statute also banned saline abortions,[241] in which chemicals are injected into the amniotic sack to burn the fetus.[242] The portions of the statute involving parental or spousal consent and prohibiting saline abortions were struck down.[241]
Floyd v. Anders
In Floyd v. Anders, 440 F. Supp. 535 (D.S.C. 1977), South Carolina attempted to prosecute a doctor for illegal abortion and murder after he attempted to abort an African American boy at 25 weeks. During the abortion, the boy was born alive and survived for 20 days before dying.[243] His prosecution was blocked by Judge Clement Haynsworth, and shortly afterwards by a unanimous three judge panel for the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina. Judge Haynsworth, writing for the panel, stated "Indeed, the Supreme Court declared the fetus in the womb is neither alive nor a person within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment."[244] John T. Noonan criticized this from an anti-abortion perspective, stating that "Judge Haynsworth had replaced the Supreme Court's test of potential ability to live with a new test of actual ability to live indefinitely. He also had spelled out what was implied in Roe v. Wade but never actually stated there. For the American legal systems the fetus in the womb was not alive."[245] The standard in Roe for viability outside the womb required a "capability of meaningful life".[246] Without this capability, the state had no compelling "important and legitimate interest in potential life".[246]
Webster v. Reproductive Health Services
In a 5–4 decision in 1989's Webster v. Reproductive Health Services, Chief Justice Rehnquist, writing for the Court, declined to explicitly overrule Roe, because "none of the challenged provisions of the Missouri Act properly before us conflict with the Constitution." In particular, the Court found that the ability to have an nontherapeutic abortion was not an affirmative right of the sort that required the state to pay for it.[151] In this case, the Court upheld several abortion restrictions, and modified the Roe trimester framework.[151]
In concurring opinions, Justice O'Connor refused to reconsider Roe, and Justice Antonin Scalia criticized the Court and Justice O'Connor for not overruling Roe.[151] Justice Blackmun stated in his dissent that Justices White, Kennedy and Rehnquist were "callous" and "deceptive," that they deserved to be charged with "cowardice and illegitimacy," and that their plurality opinion "foments disregard for the law."[151] White had recently opined that the majority reasoning in Roe v. Wade was "warped."[234]
Planned Parenthood v. Casey
During initial deliberations for Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992), an initial majority of five justices (Rehnquist, White, Scalia, Kennedy, and Thomas) were willing to effectively overturn Roe. Justice Kennedy changed his mind after the initial conference,[247] and Justices O'Connor, Kennedy, and Souter joined Justices Blackmun and Stevens to reaffirm the central holding of Roe,[248] but instead of justifying the liberty to abort as being based on privacy as in Roe, it justified the liberty in a broader manner. The opinion asserted an individual's liberty to choose concerning family life and also protection from legal enforcement intended to maintain traditional sex roles, writing,[249] "Our law affords constitutional protection to personal decisions relating to marriage, procreation, contraception, family relationships, child rearing, and education. ..."[250] and against the state insisting "upon its own vision of the woman’s role, however dominant that vision has been in the course of our history and our culture. The destiny of the woman must be shaped to a large extent on her own conception of her spiritual imperatives and her place in society."[251]
The plurality of justices stated that abortion-related legislation should be reviewed based on the undue burden standard instead of the strict scrutiny standard from Roe.[252]
The plurality also found that a fetus was now viable at 23 or 24 weeks rather than at the 28 week line from 1973.[253] They also felt that fetal viability was "more workable" than the trimester framework.[254] They abandoned the trimester framework due to two basic flaws: "in its formulation it misconceives the nature of the pregnant woman's interest; and in practice it undervalues the State's interest in potential life, as recognized in Roe."[255] Only Justice Blackmun wanted to retain Roe entirely and issue a decision completely in favor of Planned Parenthood.[195] Prior to this, he had considered a Pennsylvania viability-based law to be unconstitutionally vague in his majority opinion for Colautti v. Franklin.[256]
Justice Scalia's dissent asserted that abortion is not a liberty protected by the Constitution for the same reason bigamy was not protected either: because the Constitution does not mention it, and because longstanding traditions have permitted it to be legally proscribed.[257] He also asked:[258]
Precisely why is it that, at the magical second when machines currently in use (though not necessarily available to the particular woman) are able to keep an unborn child alive apart from its mother, the creature is suddenly able (under our Constitution) to be protected by law, whereas before that magical second it was not? That makes no more sense than according infants legal protection only after the point when they can feed themselves.
Stenberg v. Carhart
During the 1990s, Nebraska enacted a law banning partial-birth abortion. The law allowed another second-trimester abortion procedure known as dilation and evacuation. In 2000, the Supreme Court struck down the law by a 5–4 vote in Stenberg v. Carhart, with Justice Stephen Breyer writing for the majority that sometimes partial-birth abortion "would be the safest procedure".[259] Justice O'Connor wrote a concurrence stating Nebraska was actually banning both abortion methods.[260] Justices Ginsburg and Stevens joined each other's concurrences. Justice Stevens stated that "the notion that either of these two equally gruesome procedures performed at this late stage of gestation is more akin to infanticide than the other ... is simply irrational."[261] Justice Ginsburg stated that the "law does not save any fetus from destruction, for it targets only 'a method of performing abortion'."[262]
Justice Thomas's dissent stated, "The 'partial birth' gives the fetus an autonomy which separates it from the right of the woman to choose treatments for her own body."[263] Justice Scalia joined Justice Thomas's dissent and also wrote his own, stating that partial-birth abortion is "so horrible that the most clinical description of it evokes a shudder of revulsion" and that this case proved Casey was "unworkable".[264] Chief Justice Rehnquist joined the two dissents by Justices Scalia and Thomas.[265]
Justice Kennedy, who had co-authored Casey, dissented in Stenberg. He described in graphic detail exactly how a fetus dies while being dismembered during a dilation and evacuation procedure. He reasoned that since Nebraska was not seeking to prohibit it, the state was free to ban partial-birth abortion.[266]
Gonzales v. Carhart
In 2003, Congress passed the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act,[267] which led to a lawsuit in the case of Gonzales v. Carhart.[268] The Court previously ruled in Stenberg v. Carhart that a state's ban on partial-birth abortion was unconstitutional because such a ban did not have an exception for the health of the woman.[269] The membership of the Court changed after Stenberg, with Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito replacing Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justice O'Connor.[270][271] The ban at issue in Gonzales v. Carhart was similar to the one in Stenberg,[269] but had been adjusted to comply with the Court's ruling.[272]
On April 18, 2007, a 5 to 4 decision upheld the constitutionality of the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act.[271] Justice Kennedy wrote the majority opinion that Congress was within its power to ban partial-birth abortion. The Court left the door open for as-applied challenges.[273] The opinion did not address whether Casey remained valid. Instead it only assumed Casey was valid "for the purposes of this opinion".[274]
Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Scalia, Thomas, and Alito joined the majority. Justice Thomas filed a concurring opinion, joined by Justice Scalia, contending that the Court's prior decisions in Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey should be reversed.[275] They also noted that the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act may have exceeded the powers of Congress under the Commerce Clause but that the question was not raised.[276]
Justice Ginsburg, joined by Justices Stevens, Souter, and Breyer, dissented,[270] contending that the ruling ignored precedent and that abortion rights should instead be justified by equality.[271]
Dubay v. Wells
Dubay v. Wells was a 2006 paternity case where a man argued he should not have to pay child support for a child he did not want to parent. The case was billed as "Roe v. Wade for men".[277]
On March 9, 2006, Dubay filed a lawsuit before the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. Michigan's Attorney General, Joel D. McGormley, made a motion to have the case dismissed. On July 17, 2006, District Court Judge David Lawson agreed and dismissed Dubay's lawsuit.[278] He appealed it once, to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, which also dismissed it, and stated:
Dubay's claim that a man's right to disclaim fatherhood would be analogous to a woman's right to abortion rests upon a false analogy. In the case of a father seeking to opt out of fatherhood and thereby avoid child support obligations, the child is already in existence and the state therefore has an important interest in providing for his or her support.[279]
Whole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt
In 2013, the Texas legislature enacted restrictions which required abortion doctors to have admitting privileges at a local hospital and required abortion clinics to have facilities equivalent to others which conducted outpatient surgery.[280] On June 27, 2016, the Supreme Court in a 5–3 decision for Whole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt struck down these restrictions.[280]
The majority opinion by Justice Breyer struck down these two provisions of Texas law in a facial manner—that is, the very words of the provisions were invalid, no matter how they might be applied in any practical situation. The ruling also stated that the task of judging whether a law puts an undue burden on a woman's right to abortion belongs with the courts and not the legislatures.[281]
Box v. Planned Parenthood
In 2016, Indiana passed House Bill 1337, enacting a law which regulated what is done with fetal remains and banning abortion for sexist, racist, or ableist purposes.[282] In its unsigned 2019 ruling for Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc., the U.S. Supreme Court upheld the regulations about fetal remains, but declined to hear the remainder of the law, which had been blocked by lower courts.[283] Justice Ginsburg dissented from the part of the ruling about fetal remains on the basis that the regulations violated Casey.[284] She also criticized Justice Thomas over his use of the word "mother" in his concurrance.[285]
Justice Sotomayor stated that she wished the Court would not have heard the case at all.[286] Justice Thomas wrote a concurring opinion which expressed concern that the theory presented in Freakonomics echoed the views of the eugenics movement.[287] He warned that "a constitutional right to an abortion based solely on the race, sex, or disability of an unborn child, as Planned Parenthood advocates, would constitutionalize the views of the 20th-century eugenics movement". He predicted, "Although the Court declines to wade into these issues today, we cannot avoid them forever."[288]
Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization
Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization is a pending case that the Supreme Court is expected to decide in 2022. It is a legal challenge to Mississippi's 2018 Gestational Age Act, which had banned abortions after 15 weeks with exceptions only for medical emergencies or fetal abnormalities. Federal courts had enjoined the state from enforcing the law after the state's only abortion clinic, Jackson Women's Health Organization, filed suit immediately after passage; the federal courts stated that the law violated the previously established 24-week point of viability. Mississippi asked the Supreme Court to hear the case on June 15, 2020, and the Court certified the petition on May 17, 2021, limited to the question of "Whether all pre-viability prohibitions on elective abortions are unconstitutional."[289] The Court chose not to take up two other questions that Mississippi wanted to bring before the Court.[289] The oral argument was held December 1, 2021.[290] During the oral argument, Justice Alito asked,[291]
What was the — the principal source that the Court relied on in Roe for its historical analysis? Who was the author of that — of that article?
Julie Rikelman, the senior director of litigation at the Center for Reproductive Rights, responded:[291]
I apologize, Your Honor, I don't remember the author. I know that the Court spent many pages of the opinion doing a historical analysis. There's also a brief on behalf of several key American historian associations that go through that history in detail because there's even more information now that supports Roe's legal conclusions.
Role in politics
Presidential positions
Leading up to Roe
President Theodore Roosevelt held that abortion was "pre-natal infanticide" and the advocacy of abortion was "quite as immoral as to advocate theft or prostitution, and is even more hurtful".[292]
President Warren G. Harding tried to persuade Nan Britton into aborting their daughter Elizabeth. Britton recounted:[293]
He wrote that if he had to choose between medicine and an operation he personally would prefer "the knife". Just reading that word "knife" seemed almost to stab me every way, and served to strengthen my determination not to consider such a course.
Harding immediately responded "that it was all right with him, he was sorry he had complained" and acknowledged to her that it was "the greatest experience a woman ever has". Britton wrote that she "welcomed the experience of childbirth with all my heart".[293]
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt appointed Justice Douglas,[297] who voted for the majority in Roe v. Wade.[1] President Roosevelt wanted to lower the birthrate in Puerto Rico, but population control had been controversial on the island.[298] His advisor, Charles William Taussig, recounted him discussing his intentions for the island:[299]
I guess the only solution is to use the methods which Hitler used effectively ... It is all very simple and painless – you have people pass through a narrow passage and then there is the brrrrr of an electrical apparatus. They are there for twenty seconds and from then on they are sterile.
He appointed Blanton Winship as territorial governor, who carried out this intention by enacting Law 116 on May 13, 1937,[300] which established a policy of compulsory sterilization of Puerto Ricans. Compulsory sterilizations were permitted by the Supreme Court as in accordance with the Fourteenth Amendment and the Equal Protection Clause in its 1927 ruling for Buck v. Bell.[301] The Court found that the compulsory sterilization of a woman was allowed if the woman was thought to become "the probable potential parent of socially inadequate offspring, likewise afflicted, that she may be sexually sterilized without detriment to her general health, and that her welfare and that of society will be promoted by her sterilization."[302] Abortion was made effectively legal in 1937 by changes to the Penal Code. The changes permitted abortion under a broad understanding of what constitutes health of the mother in order to give doctors wide discretion.[303] The territorial legislature repealed Law 116 on June 8, 1960.[300] Sterilizations continued under federal funding to programs operated by the Puerto Rican government and the International Planned Parenthood Federation.[304] By 1976, over 37% of Puerto Rican women were sterilized, with the vast majority operated on prior to reaching the age of 30.[305]
During the Truman administration, special consultant to the Secretary of State Stanley Andrews advocated for population control to be included in President Truman's Point Four Program, but he was opposed by the Catholic Church.[306] Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers Douglas MacArthur issued an industrialization and urbanization directive on the basis of "the knowledge that an uncontrolled increase in population in Japan would have a serious effect on the economic situation and would mitigate against the accomplishment of the long-range objective of the Occupation to establish a peaceful, democratic, stable Japan".[307] He later wrote a natural resources report which included a recommendation that Japan's population be controlled. This was opposed by Catholic organizations in Tokyo. His report was recalled and he removed the offending portion of the report.[308][306] Later during Truman's presidency, the occupation-era Japanese government legalized abortion for broad reasons including the health and economic well-being of the mother under the Eugenic Protection Law.[308] Most abortions were done on economic grounds.[309] Abortion was the main method of birth control and the birth rate fell rapidly.[308] In 1950, Brigader General Crowford Sams stated that "As an occupying power, it would be a very unwise thing for anybody in the Occupation to attempt to dictate to the Japanese that they have to limit their families." He thought that this "would lead to a Communist, or any other charge, that the occupying powers are trying to strangle the population of Japan."[310]
President Dwight D. Eisenhower appointed Justices Brennan and Stewart, who voted with the majority.[297][1]
The Draper Committee, a presidential commission led by General William Henry Draper Jr., recommended to Eisenhower that the existing military-assistance program be used to fund population control programs in developing countries, and that the federal government should expand its funding of human reproduction research. After the National Catholic Welfare Conference[311] opposed this, President Eisenhower became concerned that Senator John F. Kennedy, as a Catholic, might also attack it. President Eisenhower thought it would be bad for the American people to split on a religious issue in a national political campaign,[312] so he publicly stated that population problems in other countries were not the responsibility of the U.S. government, and declined to implement Draper's plan.[313] In his Farewell Address, he warned about the danger which the scientific-technological elite posed to the future of American democracy. This warning has been interpreted to include moralistic elites seeking to use the government to curtail reproduction.[314] After his presidency, Draper continued to correspond with Eisenhower, who agreed to become an honorary chairman of the Planned Parenthood Federation along with former President Harry S. Truman. He wrote in a letter about his fear that the "alarming increase in illegitimate children" was due to mothers trying to increase their welfare benefits, and stated that in the future the government may need to limit this practice.[313] In his 1965 book Waging Peace, he urged an "effective and practicable system of population control" for India and publicly renounced his prior position about keeping the United States from getting involved in other countries' population problems.[315]
President John F. Kennedy appointed Justice White, who dissented.[297][1] When an interviewer asked Kennedy about population control in 1960, he replied, "Now, on the question of limiting population: as you know the Japanese have been doing it very vigorously, through abortion, which I think would be repugnant to all Americans. ... Most people consider their families to be their families, and that it is other people's families that provide the population explosion."[316]
President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed Justice Marshall, who voted with the majority.[297][1] President Johnson advocated and expanded federal involvement in family planning,[317] but was concerned that African Americans and Catholics would backlash if population control measures were taken too quickly.[318] The ruling for Roe v. Wade was released in the morning of the same day that President Johnson died. He died of a heart attack at 3:13 in the afternoon, Pacific Standard Time.[319]
President Richard Nixon appointed Justices Burger, Blackmun, and Powell who voted with the majority, and Justice Rehnquist who dissented.[297][1]
In the months after Nixon's inauguration, his advisor Daniel Moynihan organized a task force to draft a message for President Nixon to deliver to Congress about population control.[320] One task force member, Philander Claxton from the State Department, complained that foreigners repeatedly tell U.S. birth control advocates that "we have plenty of land, and our women want as many children as they can bring up." He explained, "We can't go to Latin America, encouraging them to accept population controls while we do not do this at home." He saw the need for domestic birth control primarily although not entirely, for the purpose of convincing people in underdeveloped countries of "our sincerity" in promoting population control.[321] President Nixon followed the committee's instructions and asked Congress to pass a list of new initiatives. Two pieces of congressional legislation were passed. One created the Title X Family Planning Program.
The other piece of legislation created the Commission on Population Growth and the American Future led by John D. Rockefeller III.[320] In 1972, the Rockefeller Commission published a report urging nationwide elective abortion on demand and other recommendations, although some commission members dissented.[322] Weddington and Coffee filed a brief[323] by an attorney who supported them prior to the second oral argument which cited this and stated, "The President's Commission recognizes the acceptability of voluntary abortion as a method of achieving population stability."[324] In 1972, Judge Lumbard on the U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut voted to strike down Connecticut's abortion law, and wrote an opinion based partly on the studies reported by the Rockefeller Commission, which "indicated the importance of slowing or halting population growth ... In short, population growth must be restricted, not enhanced, and thus the state interest in pronatalist statutes such as these is limited."[325]
In a private conversation following the Roe decision which was later revealed as part of the Nixon tapes, Nixon said, "There are times when an abortion is necessary. I know that. When you have a black and a white. Or a rape."[326][327] On the same tape, Nixon also said "Abortions encourage permissiveness" and "It breaks the family".[326] President Nixon did not publicly comment about Roe v. Wade.[328]
Following Roe
Generally, presidential opinions following Roe have been split along major party lines. The decision was opposed by Presidents Gerald Ford,[329] Ronald Reagan,[330] George W. Bush,[331] and Donald Trump.[332] President George H.W. Bush also opposed Roe, though he had supported abortion rights earlier in his career.[333][334]
During his early career, President Jimmy Carter supported legalizing abortion order to save the life of a woman or in the event of birth defects, or in other extreme circumstances.[335] As president, he thought abortion was wrong, but stated that he "accepted my obligation to enforce the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court ruling, and at the same time attempted in every way possible to minimize the number of abortions."[336] In 2012 he reflected, "I never have believed that Jesus Christ would approve of abortions and that was one of the problems I had when I was president having to uphold Roe v. Wade ..." He urged the Democratic Party to take a position supporting pregnant mothers to minimize economic and social factors driving women to get abortions. He also wanted the party to take stand in favor of banning abortion except for those whose lives "are in danger or who are pregnant as a result of rape or incest."[337]
Roe was supported by Presidents Bill Clinton[338] and Barack Obama.[339] In 1981, then-Senator Joe Biden voted for a constitutional amendment allowing states to overturn Roe v. Wade but in 1982, he voted against it.[340] In a 2007 memoir he expressed an opinion that although he was "personally opposed to abortion" he didn't have the "right to impose" his personal opposition onto others.[341]
State laws regarding Roe
In the decade after Roe, most states passed laws protecting medical workers with a conscientious objection to abortion. Nine states which had legalized abortion or loosened abortion restrictions prior to Roe already had statutory protection for those who did not want to participate in or perform an abortion. As of 2011, forty-seven states and the District of Columbia had laws allowing certain people to decline to perform certain actions or information related to abortion or reproductive health.[342] At the federal level, the Church Amendment of 1973 was proposed in order to protect private hospitals objecting to abortion from being deprived of funding. It first passed the Senate, 92-1, then a slightly modified version passed the House 372-1, and the final bill which contained it passed the Senate 94-0.[343] Justice Blackmun supported this and other regulations protecting individual physicians and entire hospitals operated by religious denominations.[344]
Some states have passed laws to maintain the legality of abortion if Roe v. Wade is overturned. Those states include California, Connecticut, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Nevada, and Washington.[345] Other states have enacted so-called trigger laws that would take effect in the event that Roe v. Wade is overturned, with the effect of outlawing abortions on the state level. Those states include Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Dakota and South Dakota.[345] Additionally, many states did not repeal pre-1973 statutes against abortion, and some of those statutes could again be in force if Roe were reversed.[346]
On April 16, 2012, Mississippi House Bill 1390 was signed into law.[347] The law attempted to make abortion unfeasible without having to overturn Roe v. Wade.[348] Judge Daniel Porter Jordan III of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi granted an injunction against the law on July 13, 2012.[349] On April 15, 2013, he issued another injunction which only applied to a part of the law which required the individual performing the abortions to have hospital admitting privileges.[350] On July 29, 2014, a three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit upheld the injunction against part of the law, with Judge Emilio M. Garza dissenting. The ruling especially relied on a case unrelated to Roe which was decided "nearly fifty years before the right to an abortion was found in the penumbras of the Constitution".[351] On February 18, 2015, Mississippi asked the Supreme Court to hear the case, but they declined to hear it on June 28, 2016.[352]
The Human Life Protection Act was signed by Alabama governor Kay Ivey on May 14, 2019 in hopes of challenging Roe v. Wade in the Supreme Court.[353] It includes exceptions for a serious health risk to the mother or a lethal fetal anomaly, but otherwise it will make abortion a felony for the abortion doctor if it goes into effect. Women subjected to an abortion will not be criminally culpable or civilly liable under the law.[354] On October 29, 2019, Judge Myron Thompson for the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Alabama issued a preliminary injunction against the law.[355]
In May 2021, Texas lawmakers passed Senate Bill 8, creating the Texas Heartbeat Act and banning abortions except in cases of medical emergency as soon as a fetal heartbeat can be detected.[356] This is typically as early as six weeks into pregnancy and often before women know they are pregnant. The law established that any Texas resident who is not a state or local government employee or official can sue abortion clinics and doctors who are known to be "aiding and abetting" abortion procedures after six weeks.[357] A clause forbids anyone who impregnated an abortion patient through rape, sexual assault, or incest to sue concerning the patient.[358] The enactment date was September 1, 2021, and the U.S. Supreme Court, in a 5–4 decision, declined a request to block enforcement of the law that day.[359] On October 22, 2021, the Court again did not block the law's enforcement, and agreed to hear arguments for United States v. Texas (2021) later, on November 1, 2021.[360] They limited the question to a review of standing.[361][362] On December 10, 2021, the Court dismissed the lawsuit on the basis that lower courts should not have accepted it.[363] This decision allows lawsuits against the executive directors of Texas's medical, nursing, and pharmacy licensing boards and also against the executive commissioner of the Texas Health and Human Services Commission, but not certain other lawsuits seeking to overturn the law.[364]
Demographic effects and opinion polls
Prior to the second oral argument in Roe, Weddington and Coffee filed a brief which was written by an attorney which supported them. The brief argued that the state once had a legitimate interest in promoting population growth, but now that the frontier was filled, growth was no longer in the state's interest.[365] On the opposing side, a brief argued that "recent statistics indicate that the population of the United States is approaching a zero growth rate." The brief also argued that abortion "appears as a completely ineffective and extremely dangerous way to deal with" alleged overpopulation and predicted that social pressure to abort would disproportionately fall on unmarried mothers.[366]
Justice Blackmun, in his opinion for Roe acknowledged that "population growth, pollution, poverty, and racial overtones tend to complicate and not to simplify the problem."[367] In response to this he stated, "Our task, of course, is to resolve the issue by constitutional measurement, free of emotion and of predilection."[367] Near the end he concluded that the Court's holding in Roe was consistent "with the demands of the profound problems of the present day."[368]
Roe v. Wade caused a 4.5% decline in births in states that had not previously legalized abortion.[369] According to a 2019 study, if Roe v. Wade is reversed and some states prohibit abortion on demand, the increases in travel distance are estimated to prevent at a low estimate of over 90,000 women and at a high estimate of over 140,000 women from having abortions in the year following the ruling's overturning.[370] If Roe were to be overturned by a constitutional amendment which would apply to all the states, fertility could be expected to increase by 11% because then mothers would not travel to states where abortion is legal.[371]
The effects of legalized abortion on fertility are stronger for white women than for black women, and stronger for firstborn children than for subsequent children. In contrast, funding abortions through Medicaid has stronger fertility effects for black women than for white women, and for subsequent children than for firstborn children.[372] 1990–2014 figures indicate the abortion rate for African American women is nearly four times the rate for white women.[373]
Although the legalization of abortion in the United States increased the labor supply of fertile-aged women in the workforce, it decreased the labor supply of older women. This is thought to be due to the fact they now had less opportunities to financially support grandchildren. Older women whose labors became less necessary for the family's financial wellbeing either left or stayed out of the workforce.[374]
The Donohue–Levitt hypothesis about the legalized abortion and crime effect proposed that legalized abortion was responsible for reductions in the crime rate. If there is a relationship between abortion and crime, there are several possibilities which could explain how abortion lowers crime. One possibility is that crime is disproportionally committed by young males, and legalizing abortion reduced the number of young males. Another possibility is that children born in the post-legalization era are less likely to commit crimes. If this is the case, it might be explained in two ways. One way is that the sort of women who have abortions are not representative of pregnant women as a whole; rather they are the sort who are most likely to give birth to children who grow up to be criminals. In this way, abortion serves to shape American family structure.[375] Studies linking demographics to crime have found that children born to American teenagers, unmarried mothers, and mothers with lower incomes are more likely to engage in criminal activity as adolescents.[376] Abortion rates are higher for these demographics. A second possible way to explain it is that women use abortion to prevent births until they are most able to provide a stable home environment. Factors involved in stability include the age, education, income, of the mother, her use of drugs and alcohol, the presence of a father, and wanted as opposed to unwanted pregnancies.[375]
Polls of Americans' opinions about abortion indicate they are about equally divided. Organizations including Gallup,[377][378] Pew,[379] and Harris[380][381] conduct abortion or Roe v. Wade related polls. Regarding the Roe decision as a whole, more Americans support it than support overturning it.[382] When pollsters describe various regulations that Roe prevents legislatures from enacting, support for Roe drops.[382][383] Poll results relating to abortion indicate nuance and frequently do not directly match up with respondents' self-identified political affiliations.[384]
The Roe effect is a hypothesis explaining why the practice of abortion will eventually lead to abortion being restricted or outlawed. The hypothesis is that people in favor of abortion rights will not parent as many children when abortion is legal, and since children tend to have similar views to their parents eventually voters will not support abortion rights.[385] In 2021, the ABC News/Washington Post poll found that 58% of those without children in their house wanted to see Roe v. Wade upheld, compared to 62% of non-parents. The All In Together poll found that only 36% with children living in their house opposed the Texas Heartbeat Act, compared to 54.9% without children.[386]
See also
- List of United States Supreme Court cases, volume 410
- List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Burger Court
- Roe vs. Wade (film), released in 1989
- Roe v. Wade (film), released in 2020
- Justifiable homicide § Common excusing conditions, sixth item listed
- Foeticide § Laws in the United States
References
- ^ a b c d e f Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973).
- ^ Mears, William; Franken, Bob (January 22, 2003). "30 years after ruling, ambiguity, anxiety surround abortion debate". CNN.
In all, the Roe and Doe rulings impacted laws in 46 states.
- ^ Greenhouse 2005, p. 72
- ^ a b Nowak & Rotunda (2012), § 18.29(a)(i).
- ^ a b c d e f Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, p. 887.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Nowak & Rotunda (2012), § 18.29(b)(i).
- ^ Dworkin, Roger (1996). Limits: The Role of the Law in Bioethical Decision Making. Indiana University Press. pp. 28–36. ISBN 978-0253330758.
- ^ a b Greenhouse 2005, pp. 135–36
- ^ Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, pp. 892–95..
- ^ Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, pp. 892–93.
- ^ a b Cole, George; Frankowski, Stanislaw. Abortion and protection of the human fetus : legal problems in a cross-cultural perspective, p. 20 (1987): "By 1900 every state in the Union had an anti-abortion prohibition." Via Google Books. Retrieved (April 8, 2008).
- ^ Reexamining Roe: Nineteenth-Century Abortion Statutes and the Fourteenth Amendment by James S. Witherspoon, St. Mary's Law Journal, Volume 29, 1985, Part III. Nineteenth-Century Criminal Abortion Statutes, Section B. The Prohibition of Pre-Quickening Attempts and the Elimination of the Quickening Distinction, pages 33–34, (pages 5–6 of the pdf)
- ^ "Even the unborn child did not escape, but was put to death for mothers, thinking they should prematurely become old women without having gained property, pierced their unborn, and thus many a child was destroyed before it was born. Others, from the time of conception to the birth of the child made it their business to extinguish its life." in "On the Decrease of Population on the Hawaiian Islands" by David Malo, Hawaiian Spectator, Volume 2, April 1839, page 123
- ^ a b Population Policy in Hawaii by Robert C. Schmitt, Hawaiian Journal of History, Volume 8, 1974, page 91 (page 2 of the pdf)
- ^ Historical Ethnography by Marshall Sahlins, Volume 1 of Anahulu: The Anthropology of History in the Kingdom of Hawaii, Part IV: "Kawailoa Society in the Mid-Nineteenth Century", Chapter 9: "Maka'ainana", University of Chicago Press, 1992, page 201
- ^ The Penal Code of the Hawaiian Kingdom, Compiled from the Penal Code of 1850, Chapter XII. Causing Abortion—Concealing the Death of an Infant, Honolulu, Oahu: Government Press, 1869, page 19 (page 63 of the pdf)
- ^ Imposition of a Western Judicial System in the Hawaiian Monarchy by Jane L. Silverman, Hawaiian Journal of History, Volume 48, 1982, page 64, note 30 and A Digest of the Decisions of the Supreme Court of Hawaii by Wade Warren Thayer, Volume 1, Honolulu: Paradise of the Pacific Press, 1916, page 133, entry on Common Law
- ^ Wilson, James, "Of the Natural Rights of Individuals Archived September 24, 2008, at the Wayback Machine" (1790–1792): "In the contemplation of law, life begins when the infant is first able to stir in the womb." Also see Blackstone, William. Commentaries Archived February 24, 2019, at the Wayback Machine (1765): "Life ... begins in contemplation of law as soon as an infant is able to stir in the mother's womb."
- ^ Fact-Checking the Abortion Claims in ‘Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health’ Oral Arguments by Lauretta Brown, National Catholic Register, December 3, 2021
- ^ Symposium on Anita Bernstein’s The Common Law Inside the Female Body by David S. Cohen, Northwestern University Law Review, Volume 114, page 145 (page 6 of the pdf)
- ^ Greenhouse 2005, p. 92
- ^ Lewis Carroll, even you wouldn't have believed Madison Scene by Keta Steebs, Door County Advocate, Volume 114, Issue 74, November 26, 1975, page 1
- ^ The "Right" to an Abortion, the Scope of Fourteenth Amendment Personhood, and the Supreme Court's Birth Requirement by John D. Gorby, Southern Illinois University Law Review, Volume 4, 1979, page 19, (page 20 of the pdf)
- ^ Buell, Samuel (January 1, 1991). "Criminal Abortion Revisited". New York University Law Review. 66 (6): 1785–1786 (pages 12–13 of the pdf). PMID 11652642.
- ^ State v. Howard 32 Vt. 399 (Vt. 1859), November 1859
- ^ a b c Paltrow, Lynn M. (January 2013). "Roe v Wade and the New Jane Crow: Reproductive Rights in the Age of Mass Incarceration". American Journal of Public Health. 103 (1): 17–21. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2012.301104. PMC 3518325. PMID 23153159.
- ^ Caught in the Net by Leslie J. Reagan, Slate September 10, 2021
- ^ Roe, 410 U.S. at 130.
- ^ Roe, 410 U.S. at 131–36, 143.
- ^ Abortion Before & After Roe by Ted Joyce, Ruoding Tan, and Yuxiu Zhang, footnote 4, Journal of Health Economics. Volume 32, Number 5, September, 2013, pages 804–815
- ^ See Karen Blumenthal, Jane Against the World: Roe v. Wade and the Fight for Reproductive Rights, Roaring Brook Press, 2020.
- ^ Dangerous Pregnancies: Mothers, Disabilities, and Abortion in Modern America by Leslie J. Reagan, Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 2010, page 172
- ^ Bachelors and Bunnies: The Sexual Politics of Playboy by Carrie Pitzulo, University of Chicago Press, page 2011, page 157
- ^ "Rally Today Supports Wheeler". The Harvard Crimson. Cambridge, Mass. Retrieved November 29, 2016.
- ^ a b c A Question of Choice by Sarah Weddington, New York: Penguin Books, 1993, page 53
- ^ A Question of Choice by Sarah Weddington, New York: Penguin Books, 1993, pages 50–51
- ^ Affidavit of Norma McCorvey, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division, Norma McCorvey, formerly known as Jane Roe, Plaintiff, vs. Henry Wade, Through His Official Successor in Office, William "Bill" Hill, Dallas County District Attorney, Defendant., Civil Action No. 3--3690-B and No. 3-3691-C, June 11, 2003, paragraph 7 on pages 4–5 of 13, affidavit pages 000005–000006
- ^ Affidavit of Norma McCorvey, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division, Norma McCorvey, formerly known as Jane Roe, Plaintiff, vs. Henry Wade, Through His Official Successor in Office, William "Bill" Hill, Dallas County District Attorney, Defendant., Civil Action No. 3--3690-B and No. 3-3691-C, June 11, 2003, paragraphs 8 and 11 on pages 4–5 of 13, affidavit pages 000005–000006
- ^ Revisiting Roe v. Wade: Substance and Process in the Abortion Debate by Margaret G. Farrell and Benjamin N. Cardozo, Indiana Law Journal, Volume 68, Issue 2, spring 1993, section one on Solicitation and Representation", pages 282–283 (pages 15–16 of the pdf)
- ^ Affidavit of Norma McCorvey, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division, Norma McCorvey, formerly known as Jane Roe, Plaintiff, vs. Henry Wade, Through His Official Successor in Office, William "Bill" Hill, Dallas County District Attorney, Defendant., Civil Action No. 3--3690-B and No. 3-3691-C, June 11, 2003, paragraph 11 on page 5 of 13, affidavit page 000006
- ^ Affidavit of Norma McCorvey, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division, Norma McCorvey, formerly known as Jane Roe, Plaintiff, vs. Henry Wade, Through His Official Successor in Office, William "Bill" Hill, Dallas County District Attorney, Defendant., Civil Action No. 3--3690-B and No. 3-3691-C, June 11, 2003, paragraph 9 on pages 4–5 of 13, affidavit pages 000005–000006
- ^ I Am Roe: My Life, Roe V. Wade, and Freedom of Choice by Norma McCorvey and Andy Meisler, New York City: HarperCollins, 1994, page 124
- ^ I Am Roe: My Life, Roe V. Wade, and Freedom of Choice by Norma McCorvey and Andy Meisler, New York City: HarperCollins, 1994, page 125
- ^ Jane Roe's Baby Tells Her Story by Joshua Prager, The Atlantic, September 9, 2021
- ^ A Question of Choice by Sarah Weddington, New York: Penguin Books, 1993, page 154
- ^ A Question of Choice by Sarah Weddington, New York: Penguin Books, 1993, page 58
- ^ a b c Roe v. Wade, 314 F. Supp. 1217, 1221 (N.D. Tex. 1970) ("On the merits, plaintiffs argue as their principal contention that the Texas Abortion Laws must be declared unconstitutional because they deprive single women and married couples of their rights secured by the Ninth Amendment to choose whether to have children. We agree.").
- ^ The Untold Dallas Origins of Roe v. Wade by Joshua Prager, D Magazine, January 11, 2022
- ^ O'Connor, Karen. Testimony before U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, "The Consequences of Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton", via archive.org (June 23, 2005). Retrieved January 30, 2007
- ^ United States v. Vuitch, 402 U.S. 62 (1971), justia.com
- ^ Dismantling a legend by Dennis J. Hutchinson, Chicago Tribune, March 16, 2003, a book review of Wild Bill: The Legend and Life of William O. Douglas by Bruce Allen Murphy, New York City: Random House, 2003, 716 pages
- ^ United States v. Vuitch (1971), No. 84 Argued: January 12, 1971, Decided: April 21, 1971, findlaw.com
- ^ The Politics of Abortion in the United States and Canada: A Comparative Study by Raymond Tatalovich, New York: Routledge, 1997, page 56
- ^ Greenhouse 2005, pp. 77–79
- ^ a b Forsythe, Clarke (2013). Abuse of Discretion: The Inside Story of Roe v. Wade. Encounter Books. p. 98. ISBN 978-1594036927.
- ^ Forsythe, Clarke (2013). Abuse of Discretion: The Inside Story of Roe v. Wade. Encounter Books. p. 92. ISBN 978-1594036927.
- ^ Greenhouse 2005, p. 80
- ^ The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court by Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong, New York: Simon and Schuster, page 1979, page 265
- ^ Sant, Geoffrey. "8 horrible courtroom jokes and their ensuing legal calamities", Salon.com (July 27, 2013): "The title of Worst Joke in Legal History belongs to one of history's highest-profile cases. Defending Texas's abortion restrictions before the Supreme Court, attorney Mr. Jay Floyd decided to open oral argument with a sexist joke." Retrieved August 10, 2010.
- ^ Malphurs 2010, p. 48
- ^ Garrow 1994, p. 526
- ^ Won by Love: Norma McCorvey, Jane Roe of Roe v. Wade, Speaks Out for the Unborn as She Shares Her New Conviction For Life by Norma McCorvey and Gary Thomas, Nashville, Tennessee: Thomas Nelson, 1997, Chapter 5, The Shadow Plaintiff pages 36–37
- ^ a b Schwartz 1988, p. 103
- ^ The Justices Behind Roe v. Wade: The Inside Story, Adapted from The Brethren by Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong, New York: Simon and Schuster, 2021, page 96
- ^ a b Greenhouse 2005, pp. 81–88
- ^ Dispatch from the Supreme Court Archives: Vagrancy, Abortion, and What the Links Between Them Reveal About the History of Fundamental Rights by Risa L. Goluboff, Stanford Law Review Volume 62, Issue 5, page 1379 (page 20 of the pdf)
- ^ Defenders of the Unborn: The Pro-life Movement Before Roe V. Wade by Daniel K. Williams, New York: Oxford University Press, page 200
- ^ A Question of Choice by Sarah Weddington, New York: Penguin Books, 1993, page 132–133
- ^ Greenhouse 2005, p. 81
- ^ Garrow 1994, p. 556
- ^ Greenhouse 2005, p. 89
- ^ "Roe v. Wade 410 U.S. 113". LII / Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School. Retrieved October 24, 2020.
- ^ a b Browder, Sue Ellen (2015). Subverted: How I Helped the Sexual Revolution Hijack the Women's Movement. Ignatius Press. pp. 93–94. ISBN 978-1586177966. Retrieved August 24, 2018.
george frampton jr.
- ^ Browder, Sue Ellen (2015). Subverted: How I Helped the Sexual Revolution Hijack the Women's Movement. Ignatius Press. pp. 95–96. ISBN 978-1586177966. Retrieved August 24, 2018.
george frampton jr.
- ^ Abortion by Lawrence Lader, Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1966, page 151
- ^ Abortion by Lawrence Lader, Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1966, page 154
- ^ Greenhouse 2005, pp. 93–95
- ^ Greenhouse 2005, pp. 96–97
- ^ a b Revelations on the Road to Roe by David Garrow, American Lawyer, Volume 22, May 2000, page 4 of the pdf
- ^ a b Savage, David G. (September 14, 2005). "Roe Ruling: More Than Its Author Intended". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved October 11, 2021.
- ^ Kmiec, Douglas. "Testimony Before Subcommittee on the Constitution, Judiciary Committee, U.S. House of Representatives" (April 22, 1996), page 97, Archived August 21, 2008
- ^ Greenhouse 2005, p. 97
- ^ Lee (1992), pp. 610–11.
- ^ Abernathy, M. et al. (1993), Civil Liberties Under the Constitution. U. South Carolina, p. 4. Retrieved February 4, 2007.
- ^ Chemerinsky, Erwin (2003). Federal Jurisdiction. Introduction to Law (4th ed.). Aspen Publishers. p. 132. ISBN 978-0-7355-2718-8.
- ^ Roe, 410 U.S. at 125; see also Schwartz 1988, pp. 108–09
- ^ Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, pp. 854–56.
- ^ Quoted in Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, pp. 854–55.
- ^ Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, p. 855, quoting Roe, 410 U.S. at 153.
- ^ a b c Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, p. 855.
- ^ Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, pp. 855.
- ^ Quoted in Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, p. 855.
- ^ a b c Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, p. 888, note 47.
- ^ a b Roe v. Wade, Mr. Chief Justice Burger, concurring, Landmark Cases, C-SPAN, January 22, 1973
- ^ Judges as Medical Decision Makers: Is the Cure Worse than the Disease by Alan A. Stone, Cleveland State Law Review, Volume 33, Issue 4, 1984, page 580 (page 3 of the pdf)
- ^ Judges as Medical Decision Makers: Is the Cure Worse than the Disease by Alan A. Stone, Cleveland State Law Review, Volume 33, Issue 4, 1984, pages 579–580 (pages 2–3 of the pdf)
- ^ Roe, 410 U.S. at 163, justia.com
- ^ Roe, 410 U.S. at 164, justia.com
- ^ a b Rehnquist papers offer peek inside Supreme Court by Adam Gorlick, Stanford Report, November 20, 2008
- ^ Judges as Medical Decision Makers: Is the Cure Worse than the Disease by Alan A. Stone, Cleveland State Law Review, Volume 33, Issue 4, 1984, pages 581–582 (pages 4–5 of the pdf)
- ^ Roe v. Wade, Mr. Justice Rehnquist, concurring, Landmark Cases, C-SPAN, January 22, 1973
- ^ Roe v. Wade, Mr. Justice White, concurring, Landmark Cases, C-SPAN, January 22, 1973
- ^ Doe v. Bolton, 410 U.S. 179 (1973), justia.com
- ^ Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, p. 888, quoting Doe, 410 U.S. at 222 (White, J., dissenting).
- ^ Roe, 410 U.S. at 174–77 (Rehnquist, J., dissenting).
- ^ Currie, David (1994). "The Constitution in the Supreme Court: The Second Century, 1888–1986". 2. University of Chicago Press: 470.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ "Rehnquist's legacy", The Economist (June 30, 2005).
- ^ Kommers, Donald P.; Finn, John E.; Jacobsohn, Gary J. (2004). American Constitutional Law: Essays, Cases, and Comparative Notes. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-2687-7.
- ^ a b I Am Roe: My Life, Roe V. Wade, and Freedom of Choice by Norma McCorvey and Andy Meisler, New York City: HarperCollins, 1994, appendix, page 204
- ^ a b I Am Roe: My Life, Roe V. Wade, and Freedom of Choice by Norma McCorvey and Andy Meisler, New York City: HarperCollins, 1994, pages 121–122
- ^ Plaintiff-Intervenor Hallford's Original Complaint, filed March 23, 1970 in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas Dallas Division Civil Action No. CA-3-3690-B, page 39
- ^ Plaintiff-Intervenor Hallford's Original Complaint, filed March 23, 1970 in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas Dallas Division Civil Action No. CA-3-3690-B, page 37
- ^ Affidavit of Jane Roe in Roe v. Wade, May 21, 1970, Case File 70-18; Roe v. Wade; Appellate Jurisdiction Case Files, 1792 - 2015; Records of the Supreme Court of the United States, Record Group 267; National Archives Building, Washington, D.C., docsteach.org
- ^ Transcript of First Oral Argument in Roe v. Wade 410 U.S. 113 (1973), U.S. Supreme Court, December 13, 1971, edited September 2011, aul.org, page 6
- ^ a b Transcript of First Oral Argument in Roe v. Wade 410 U.S. 113 (1973), U.S. Supreme Court, December 13, 1971, edited September 2011, aul.org, page 24
- ^ a b Transcript of First Oral Argument in Roe v. Wade 410 U.S. 113 (1973), U.S. Supreme Court, December 13, 1971, edited September 2011, aul.org, page 25
- ^ [https://aul.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/68497271-Transcript-Roe-v-Wade-Re-Argument-Oct-1972.pdf Transcript of Reargument in Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), U.S. Supreme Court, October 11, 1972, edited September 2011, aul.org, page 7
- ^ Roe, 410 U.S. at 142 and footnote 42 (footnote is for 148) justia.com
- ^ Roe v. Wade, Mr. Justice Douglas, concurring, Landmark Cases, C-SPAN, January 22, 1973
- ^ I Am Roe: My Life, Roe V. Wade, and Freedom of Choice by Norma McCorvey and Andy Meisler, New York City: HarperCollins, 1994, page 155
- ^ This Woman and This Man Made History by Lloyd Shearer, Parade magazine, May 8, 1983; for a book which relied on Shearer, see Storm center: the Supreme Court in American politics by David M. O'Brien, New York City: W. W. Norton, 1986, pages 22–24
- ^ The woman whose famous abortion case led to the..., UPI archives, September 8, 1987
- ^ a b c Noble, Kenneth B.; Times, Special To the New York (September 9, 1987). "Key Abortion Plaintiff Now Denies She Was Raped". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved September 27, 2020.
- ^ McCorvey, Norma. Statement of Norma McCorvey, in testimony to the Senate Subcommittee on the Constitution, Federalism and Property Rights, page 44, January 21, 1998, also quoted in the parliament of Western Australia (PDF), May 20, 1998, retrieved January 27, 2007
- ^ Affidavit of Norma McCorvey, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas, Dallas Division, Norma McCorvey, formerly known as Jane Roe, Plaintiff, vs. Henry Wade, Through His Official Successor in Office, William "Bill" Hill, Dallas County District Attorney, Defendant., Civil Action No. 3--3690-B and No. 3-3691-C, June 11, 2003, page 6 of 13, affidavit page 000007
- ^ Testimony of Norma McCorvey, June 23, 2005, judiciary.senate.gov, page 1
- ^ Substantive Due Process by any other name: The Abortion Cases by Richard A. Epstein, The Supreme Court Review 1973, University of Chicago Press, 1974, page 185
- ^ Kitchener, Caroline (October 2, 2021). "Thousands gather at Women's March rallies in D.C., across U.S. to protect Roe v. Wade". The Washington Post.
- ^ a b c d After Roe: The Lost History of the Abortion Debate by Mary Ziegler, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2015, page 98
- ^ After Roe: The Lost History of the Abortion Debate by Mary Ziegler, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2015, page 103
- ^ After Roe: The Lost History of the Abortion Debate by Mary Ziegler, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2015, page 117
- '^ Roes Race: The Supreme Court, Population Control, and Reproductive Justice, Yale Journal of Law and Feminism Volume 25, Issue 1, 2013, page 19
- ^ In 1969, Planned Parenthood-World Population took a position in favor of repealing all laws against abortion; see Gender and Women's Leadership: A Reference Handbook by Karen O'Connor, London: SAGE Publications, 2010, page 744; the Planned Parenthood organization had merged with the World Population Emergency Campaign organization in 1961 to create Planned Parenthood-World Population; see Population Crisis, Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Foreign Aid Expenditures of the Committee on Government Operations, United States Senate, Eighty-Ninth Congress, First Session on S. 1676, June 29; July 9–24, 1965, Part 2-A, page 916; the merger occurred during a shift within the birth control movement away from individual health and towards population control; see Competitive Problems in the Drug Industry, Hearings before the Subcommittee on Monopoly of the Select Committee on Small Business. United States Senate, Ninety-First Congress, First session on Present Status of Competition in the Pharmaceutical Industry, February 24–March 4, 1970, Part 16, Oral Contraceptives (Volume Two), page 6742
- ^ After Roe: The Lost History of the Abortion Debate by Mary Ziegler, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2015, page 115
- ^ Black Maverick: T.R.M. Howard's Fight for Civil Rights and Economic Power by David T. Beito and Linda Royster Beito, Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press, 2009, page 215
- '^ Roes Race: The Supreme Court, Population Control, and Reproductive Justice, Yale Journal of Law and Feminism Volume 25, Issue 1, 2013, page 35
- ^ Relf Sisters Sue for Involuntary Sterilization, Moments in the Civil Rights Movement, Voices of the Civil Rights Movement, Comcast/NBC Universal, April 4, 2015
- ^ After Roe: The Lost History of the Abortion Debate by Mary Ziegler, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 2015, page 117; Richard Bowers, who previously had co-founded of ZPG and also served on the NARAL Executive Committee, would later write in 1994, "I, personally, back govt coercion, as in China, to force less birthing faster than what has happened here in the US ..."; Globally Responsible Birthing by Richard M. Bowers, newsletter 1994
- ^ a b Global Challenges, Local Knowledges: Politics and Expertise at the World Population Conference in Bucharest, 1974 by Corina Doboș, East Central Europe, Volume 45, November 29, 2018, pages 219–220 (page 5–6 of the pdf)
- ^ Translations on Sub-Saharan Africa, United States Joint Publications Research Service circular #72986, issue number 2074 March 13, 1979, page 15
- ^ a b c Roe's Race: The Supreme Court, Population Control, and Reproductive Justice by Mary Ziegler, Yale Journal of Law and Feminism Volume 25, Issue 1, 2013, page 36; for the source of the memo see footnote 236
- '^ Roes Race: The Supreme Court, Population Control, and Reproductive Justice, by Mary Ziegler, Yale Journal of Law and Feminism Volume 25, Issue 1, 2013, page 28
- ^ a b "Forced Labor: A Thirteenth Amendment Defense of Abortion", Archived February 25, 2009, by Andrew Koppelman, Northwestern Law Review, Vol. 84, p. 480 (1990).
- ^ a b What Roe v. Wade Should Have Said; The Nation's Top Legal Experts Rewrite America's Most Controversial decision, Jack Balkin Ed. (NYU Press 2005). Retrieved January 26, 2007
- ^ Poll: Americans Continue to Misunderstand Roe by Alexandra Desanctis, National Review, December 7, 2021
- ^ Ross L, Solinger R (March 21, 2017). Reproductive justice : an introduction. Oakland, California. ISBN 9780520288201. OCLC 960969169.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ West R (2009). "From Choice to Reproductive Justice: De Constitutionalizing Abortion Rights". Yale Law Journal. 118: 1394–1432.
- ^ Gaard G (2010). "Reproductive Technology, or Reproductive Justice? An Ecofeminist, Environmental Justice Perspective on the Rhetoric of Choice". Ethics and the Environment. 15 (2): 103–129. doi:10.2979/ete.2010.15.2.103. S2CID 144393726.
- ^ Symposium on Anita Bernstein’s The Common Law Inside the Female Body by David S. Cohen, Northwestern University Law Review, Volume 114, page 147 (page 8 of the pdf)
- ^ Appel, Jacob M. (April 24, 2009). "Do We Need a Pro-Choice Litmus Test for Obstetricians?". Huffington Post. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
- ^ a b c d e Webster v. Reproductive Health Services, 492 U.S. 490 (1989).
- ^ Jane L. v. Bangerter, 828 F. Supp. 1544 (D. Utah 1993)
- ^ Shimron, Yonat. "Democratic Gains Spur Abortion Foes into Action," The News & Observer (January 18, 2009, archived June 25, 2009): "The annual March for Life procession is already among Washington's largest rallies, drawing an estimated 200,000 people."
- ^ Harper, Jennifer. "a marchers lose attention," Washington Times (January 22, 2009): "the event has consistently drawn about 250,000 participants each year since 2003."
- ^ Johnston, Laura. "Cleveland's first March for Life anti-abortion event draws 200," The Plain Dealer (January 18, 2009): "the Washington March for Life ... draws 200,000 annually on the anniversary of the Roe v. Wade decision." (Archived March 9, 2021)
- ^ "Youth Turnout Strong at US March for Life". Catholic.net. Zenit.org. January 25, 2011. Retrieved February 9, 2011.
- ^ Portteus, Danielle (February 10, 2013). "Newport: 650,000 In March For Life". The Monroe News. MonroeNews. Archived from the original on February 13, 2014. Retrieved April 14, 2013.
- ^ James F. Childress (1984). Bioethics Reporter. University Publications of America. p. 463. Retrieved August 2, 2013.
Roe v. Wade itself provided abortion rights with an unstable foundation.
- ^ Alex Locay (2008). Unveiling the Left. Xulon Press. p. 187. ISBN 978-1-60266-869-0. Retrieved August 2, 2013.
To justify their decision the Court made up a new "right", not found in the Constitution: the right to privacy. The founders of course never intended for such rights to exist as we know privacy is limited in many ways.
- ^ Reagan, Ronald. Abortion and the Conscience of the Nation, (Nelson 1984): "If you don't know whether a body is alive or dead, you would never bury it. I think this consideration itself should be enough for all of us to insist on protecting the unborn." Retrieved January 26, 2007
- ^ Guttmacher Institute, "State Policies in Brief, An Overview of Abortion Laws (PDF)", published January 1, 2007. Retrieved January 26, 2007.
- ^ Harris v. McRae, 448 U.S. 297 (1980).
- ^ Doe v. Bolton, 410 U.S. 179 (1973).
- ^ Balkin, Jack. Bush v. "Gore and the Boundary Between Law and Politics" Archived February 27, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, 110 Yale Law Journal 1407 (2001): "Liberal and feminist legal scholars have spent decades showing that the result was correct even if Justice Blackmun's opinion seems to have been taken from the Court's Cubist period."
- ^ Cohen, Richard. "Support Choice, Not Roe", Washington Post, (October 19, 2005): "If the best we can say for it is that the end justifies the means, then we have not only lost the argument—but a bit of our soul as well." Retrieved January 23, 2007.
- ^ Supreme Court Justice's Papers Opened for Research by Daun Van Ee, Library of Congress Information Bulletin, Volume 63, Number 4, April 2004
- ^ a b The Brains Behind Blackmun by David J. Garrow, Legal Affairs: The Magazine at the intersection of law and life, May/June 2005
- ^ Readers Respond: Justice Blackmun, letter by Edward Lazarus, Legal Affairs: The Magazine at the intersection of law and life, May/June 2005
- ^ Rosen, Jeffrey (September 23, 2007). "The Dissenter". The New York Times Magazine. Rosen notes that Stevens is "the oldest and arguably most liberal justice."
- ^ Some Thoughts on Autonomy and Equality in Relation to Roe v. Wade", North Carolina Law Review Volume 63, Number 2, Article 4, 1985, page 381, (page 8 of the pdf)
- ^ Some Thoughts on Autonomy and Equality in Relation to Roe v. Wade by Ruth Ginsburg, North Carolina Law Review Volume 63, Number 2, Article 4, 1985, page 382, (page 9 of the pdf); page 385 (page 12 of the pdf) reads: "The political process was moving in the early 1970s, not swiftly enough for advocates of quick, complete change, but majoritarian institutions were listening and acting. Heavy-handed judicial intervention was difficult to justify and appears to have provoked, not resolved, conflict." Retrieved January 23, 2007.
- ^ Bullington, Jonathan (May 11, 2013). "Justice Ginsburg: Roe v. Wade not 'woman-centered'". Chicago Tribune.
- ^ a b The Place of Women on the Court by Emily Bazelon, New York Times Magazine, July 7, 2009
- ^ Cox, Archibald. The Role of the Supreme Court in American Government, 113–14 (Oxford U. Press 1976), quoted in the statement of Hon. Henry Hyde, A U.S. Representative from the State of Illinois, from the Hearings before the Subcommittee on Separation of Powers of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1982, page 916; Stuart Taylor has argued that "Roe v. Wade was sort of conjured up out of very general phrases and was recorded, even by most liberal scholars like Archibald Cox at the time, John Harvey Link—just to name two Harvard scholars—as kind of made-up constitutional law." Stuart Taylor Jr, Online News Hour, PBS July 13, 2000
- ^ Ely, John Hart. "The Wages of Crying Wolf Archived 2007-06-25 at the Wayback Machine", 82 Yale Law Journal 920 (1973). Retrieved January 23, 2007. Professor Ely "supported the availability of abortion as a matter of policy." See Liptak, Adam. "John Hart Ely, a Constitutional Scholar, Is Dead at 64", The New York Times (October 27, 2003). Ely is generally regarded as having been a "liberal constitutional scholar." Perry, Michael (1999). We the People: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Supreme Court at Google Books
- ^ John Hart Ely (1973), "The Wages of Crying Wolf: A Comment on Roe v. Wade" (PDF), Yale Law Journal, 82 (5): 920–49, quotation from pages 935 and following (page 17 and following of the pdf), doi:10.2307/795536, JSTOR 795536, PMID 11663374, quoted in Chemerinsky (2019), § 10.3.3.1, p. 856.
- ^ Tribe, Laurence (1973). "The Supreme Court, 1972 Term – Foreword: Toward a Model of Roles in the Due Process of Life and Law". Harvard Law Review. 87 (1): 1–314. doi:10.2307/1339866. JSTOR 1339866. PMID 11663596. Quoted in Morgan, Richard Gregory (1979). "Roe v. Wade and the Lesson of the Pre-Roe Case Law". Michigan Law Review. 77 (7): 1724–48. doi:10.2307/1288040. JSTOR 1288040. PMID 10245969.
- ^ "Judges have no special competence, qualifications, or mandate to decide between equally compelling moral claims (as in the abortion controversy)... ." Taking the Stand: My Life in the Law by Alan Dershowitz, New York: Broadway Books, 2013, page 433
- ^ Sunstein, Cass, quoted in Roe v. Wade an Issue Ahead of Alito Hearing by Brian McGuire, New York Sun (November 15, 2005): "What I think is that it just doesn't have the stable status of Brown or Miranda because it's been under internal and external assault pretty much from the beginning ... As a constitutional matter, I think Roe was way overreached." Retrieved January 23, 2007. Sunstein is a "liberal constitutional scholar". See "Former U of C law prof on everyone's short court list" by Eric Herman, Chicago Sun-Times (Archived December 23, 2007)
- ^ Roosevelt, Kermit. "Shaky Basis for a Constitutional ‘Right’", Washington Post, (January 22, 2003): "[I]t is time to admit in public that, as an example of the practice of constitutional opinion writing, Roe is a serious disappointment. You will be hard-pressed to find a constitutional law professor, even among those who support the idea of constitutional protection for the right to choose, who will embrace the opinion itself rather than the result. ... This is not surprising. As constitutional argument, Roe is barely coherent. The court pulled its fundamental right to choose more or less from the constitutional ether. It supported that right via a lengthy, but purposeless, cross-cultural historical review of abortion restrictions and a tidy but irrelevant refutation of the straw-man argument that a fetus is a constitutional 'person' entitled to the protection of the 14th Amendment. ... By declaring an inviolable fundamental right to abortion, Roe short-circuited the democratic deliberation that is the most reliable method of deciding questions of competing values." Retrieved January 23, 2007. (Archived Archived March 19, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, March 19, 2007)
- ^ Rosen, Jeffrey (February 24, 2003). "Why We'd Be Better off Without Roe: Worst Choice". The New Republic. Archived from the original on March 9, 2003. Retrieved January 23, 2007.
In short, 30 years later, it seems increasingly clear that this pro-choice magazine was correct in 1973 when it criticized Roe on constitutional grounds. Its overturning would be the best thing that could happen to the federal judiciary, the pro-choice movement, and the moderate majority of the American people.
- See also: Rosen, Jeffrey (June 2006). "The Day After Roe". The Atlantic. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
- ^ Kinsley, Michael. "Bad choice", The New Republic (June 13, 2004): "Against all odds (and, I'm afraid, against all logic), the basic holding of Roe v. Wade is secure in the Supreme Court. ... [A] freedom of choice law would guarantee abortion rights the correct way, democratically, rather than by constitutional origami." Quoted in Honest pro-choicers admit Roe v. Wade was a horrible decision by Timothy P. Carney, Washington Examiner, January 22, 2011
- ^ Saletan, William. "Unbecoming Justice Blackmun", Legal Affairs, May/June 2005. Retrieved January 23, 2007. Saletan is a self-described liberal. See Saletan, William. "Rights and Wrongs: Liberals, progressives, and biotechnology", Slate (July 13, 2007).
- ^ Wittes, Benjamin. "Letting Go of Roe", The Atlantic Monthly, Jan/Feb 2005. Retrieved January 23, 2007. Wittes also said, "I generally favor permissive abortion laws." He has elsewhere noted, "In their quieter moments, many liberal scholars recognize that the decision is a mess." See Wittes, Benjamin. "A Little Less Conversation", The New Republic November 29, 2007
- ^ Lazarus, Edward. "The Lingering Problems with Roe v. Wade, and Why the Recent Senate Hearings on Michael McConnell's Nomination Only Underlined Them", Findlaw's Writ (October 3, 2002). Retrieved January 23, 2007.
- ^ Roe, 410 U.S. at 161
- ^ The Law of Torts by William Lloyd Prosser, 4th edition, St Paul, Minnesota: West Publishing, 1971, page 337
- ^ Substantive Due Process by any other name: The Abortion Cases by Richard A. Epstein, The Supreme Court Review 1973, University of Chicago Press, 1974, page 174
- ^ Forsythe, Clarke (2013). Abuse of Discretion: The Inside Story of Roe v. Wade. Encounter Books. p. 496. ISBN 978-1594036927.
- ^ Stith, Irene. Abortion Procedures, CRS Report for Congress (PDF) (November 17, 1997). Retrieved December 21, 2021.
- ^ a b Legalized abortion a decade later, Santa Cruz Sentinel, Volume 127, Number 13, January 16, 1983
- ^ a b Blackmun Accepts Aftermath of Writing Abortion Opinion, New York Times, January 18, 1983, Section A, Page 20
- ^ Forsythe, Clarke (2013). Abuse of Discretion: The Inside Story of Roe v. Wade. Encounter Books. p. 18. ISBN 978-1594036927.
- ^ Forsythe, Clarke (2013). Abuse of Discretion: The Inside Story of Roe v. Wade. Encounter Books. p. 19. ISBN 978-1594036927., also see Book Review: 'Abuse of Discretion' by Clarke D. Forsythe by Jeffrey Rosen, Wall Street Journal, October 11, 2013
- ^ a b Casey, 505 U.S. at 930–34 (Blackmun, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) ("In sum, Roe's requirement of strict scrutiny as implemented through a trimester framework should not be disturbed.").
- ^ Greenhouse 2005, pp. 183–206, 250
- ^ Won by Love: Norma McCorvey, Jane Roe of Roe v. Wade, Speaks Out for the Unborn as She Shares Her New Conviction For Life by Norma McCorvey and Gary Thomas, Nashville, Tennessee: Thomas Nelson, 1997, Chapter 5, The Shadow Plaintiff pages 38–39
- ^ Won by Love: Norma McCorvey, Jane Roe of Roe v. Wade, Speaks Out for the Unborn as She Shares Her New Conviction For Life by Norma McCorvey and Gary Thomas, Nashville, Tennessee: Thomas Nelson, 1997, Chapter 5, The Shadow Plaintiff pages 38
- ^ Won by Love: Norma McCorvey, Jane Roe of Roe v. Wade, Speaks Out for the Unborn as She Shares Her New Conviction For Life by Norma McCorvey and Gary Thomas, Nashville, Tennessee: Thomas Nelson, 1997, Chapter 5, The Shadow Plaintiff pages 39
- ^ "Roe v Wade: Woman in US abortion legal test case dies". bbc.co.uk. February 18, 2017.
- ^ McCorvey, Norma. Testimony to the Senate Subcommittee on the Constitution, Federalism and Property Rights (January 21, 1998), also quoted in the parliament of Western Australia (PDF) (May 20, 1998); for a description of an incident which brought McCorvey to reflect about "women already wearing maternity clothes", see Won by Love: Norma McCorvey, Jane Roe of Roe v. Wade, Speaks Out for the Unborn as She Shares Her New Conviction For Life, Norma McCorvey and Gary Thomas, Nashville, Tennessee: Thomas Nelson, 1997, page 60.
- ^ "Pro-life ad campaign features former abortion-rights figures". Baptist Press. January 15, 2002. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
- ^ McCorvey v. Hill, 385 F.3d 846 (5th Cir. 2004).
- ^ "FindLaw's United States Fifth Circuit case and opinions". Findlaw. Retrieved November 29, 2021.
- ^ Adams, Andrew (2004). "Aborting Roe: Jane Roe Questions the Viability of Roe v. Wade". Tex. Rev. L. & Pol.
- ^ "SUPREME COURT DECLINES TO REVISIT ABORTION CASE McCorvey v. Hill | Secondary Sources | Westlaw". content.next.westlaw.com. Retrieved November 29, 2021.
- ^ Porterfield, Carlie (May 19, 2020). "'Roe Vs. Wade' Plaintiff Was Paid To Switch Sides In Abortion Fight, Documentary Reveals". Forbes. Archived from the original on May 20, 2020. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
- ^ Serjeant, Jill (May 20, 2020). "Plaintiff in Roe v. Wade U.S. abortion case says she was paid to switch sides". www.reuters.com. Reuters. Archived from the original on May 20, 2020. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
- ^ Lozano, Alicia Victoria. "Anti-abortion rights movement paid 'Jane Roe' thousands to switch sides, documentary reveals" NBC News (May 19, 2020).
- ^ The 'painful journey' of Jane Roe and the pro-life movement by J.D.Flynn, Catholic News Agency, May 19, 2020 (Archived December 6, 2021)
- ^ Identity of 'Roe baby' revealed after decades of secrecy by Scott Stump, NBC News, September 9, 2021
- ^ The Roe Family: An American Story by Joshua Prager, W. W. Norton & Company, September 14, 2021, page 116
- ^ Sarah Weddington Exit Interview by Emily Soapes, Carter Presidential Library, January 2, 1981
- ^ Winning Roe v. Wade: Q&A with Sarah Weddington by Valerie Lapinski, Time (January 22, 2013)
- ^ Tulsa World, May 24, 1993, selection reprinted in The Coyote Chronicle, California State University, San Bernadino, Volume 30, Issue 14, May 29, 1996, page four of the Human Life Alliance Advertising Supplement, (page 21 of the pdf)
- ^ Consistently Opposing Killing: From Abortion to Assisted Suicide, the Death Penalty, and War by Rachel MacNair and Stephen Zunes, April 2008, Westport, Connecticut: Praeger, page 4, quoted from the February 15, 1998 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
- ^ Sarah Weddington, lawyer in Roe v. Wade case, dies at 76 by Kate McGee, Texas Tribune, December 26, 2021 (Archived December 26, 2021)
- ^ San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez and Its Aftermath by Jeffrey S. Sutton, Virginia Law Review, Volume 94, Number 8, December 2008, page 1968 (page 6 of the pdf)
- ^ San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez 411 U.S. 1 (1973) at 33 and footnote 76, justia.com
- ^ a b c San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez 411 U.S. 1 (1973) at 101 (Marshall, J., dissenting), justia.com
- ^ In Search of Human Nature: The Decline and Revival of Darwinism in American Social Thought by Carl N. Degler, New York: Oxford University Press, 1991, page 48, footnote; In 1996, literary scholar Roger Shattuck also observed that Roe v. Wade exploited a preexisting lack of protection for procreation in American jurisprudence. See Forbidden Knowledge: From Prometheus to Pornography by Roger Shattuck, San Diego, California: Harcourt Brace and Company, 1996, page 197, footnote
- ^ San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez 411 U.S. 1 (1973) at 100 (Marshall, J., dissenting), justia.com
- ^ San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez 411 U.S. 1 (1973) at 102–103 (Marshall, J., dissenting), justia.com
- ^ Perfection: The Perfection: The Fatality of Down Syndrome by Mallory Baucom, Undergraduate honors thesis, Gardner-Webb University, December 2018, page 11 (page 12 of the pdf)
- ^ Prenatal Tort Slippage Health Matrix: The Journal of Law-Medicine, Volume 31, Issue 1, 2001, page 222 (page 3 of the pdf)
- ^ Fox, Dov (June 11, 2018). "Privatizing procreative liberty in the shadow of eugenics". Journal of Law and the Biosciences. 5 (2): 355–374. doi:10.1093/jlb/lsy011. PMC 6121041. PMID 30191069. Retrieved September 12, 2020.
- ^ What's Unconstitutional About Wrongful Life Claims? Ask Jane Roe... by Bruce R. Parker, Scott C. Armstrong, and Thomasina Poirot, Defense Counsel Journal, Volume 87, Number 3, July 2020, page 2
- ^ Gleitman v. Cosgrove 49 N.J. 22 (1967), 227 A.2d 689, justia.com
- ^ a b Raleigh Fitkin-Paul Morgan Mem. Hosp. v. Anderson 42 N.J. 421 (1964), justia.com.
- ^ In re Brown, Fifth Division, December 31, 1997 No. 1-96-2316, justia.com
- ^ When a Parent's Religious Belief Endangers Her Unborn Child by Faith Lagay, Virtual Mentor, Volume 7, Issue 5, May 2005, pages 375–378; for general context see Jehovah's Witnesses and blood transfusions
- ^ Reagan, Ronald. Interview With Eleanor Clift, Jack Nelson, and Joel Havemann of the Los Angeles Times (June 23, 1986). Retrieved January 23, 2007. (Archived December 21, 2021)
- ^ City of Akron v. Akron Center for Reproductive Health, 462 U.S. 416 (1983).
- ^ a b Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, 476 U.S. 747 (1986).
- ^ Abortion and Constitution: United States and West Germany by Donald P. Kommers, 1977, page 267 (page 14 of the pdf)
- ^ a b Jonas, Robert E.; John D. Gorby. "German Constitutional Court Abortion Decision (English translation of German text)". The John Marshall Journal of Practice and Procedure. 9: 605. Retrieved January 2, 2022.
- ^ Abortion and Constitution: United States and West Germany by Donald P. Kommers, 1977, page 268 (page 15 of the pdf)
- ^ Abortion and Constitution: United States and West Germany by Donald P. Kommers, 1977, page 269 (page 16 of the pdf)
- ^ R. v. Morgentaler, 1 S.C.R. 30 (1988), V/lex
- ^ Planned Parenthood of Central Missouri v. Danforth, 428 U.S. 52 (1976).
- ^ a b Quast, Gerald D. (1976). "Constitutional Law-Blanket Parental Consent Requirement for Minor's Abortion Decision Is Unconstitutional" (PDF). Texas Tech Law Review. 8: 394 (page 1 of the pdf). Retrieved January 9, 2022.
- ^ 'I survived an abortion attempt' by Jane Elliott, December 6, 2005, BBC News
- ^ The Root and Branch of Roe v. Wade by John T. Noonan Jr., Nebraska Law Review, Volume 63, Issue 4, Article 4, 1984, page 674, (page 8 of the pdf)
- ^ Floyd v. Anders, 440 F. Supp. 535 (D.S.C. 1977) at 539, justia.com
- ^ The Abortion Liberty by John T. Noonan Jr., Human Life Review, Summer 1979, Volume 5, Number 3, page 74
- ^ a b Roe, 410 U.S. at 163; "Early death as a management option" became a medical practice for disabled infants; the practice was legally defended under the right to privacy. Early death for infants was considered "a late abortion" but became regulated by the Baby Doe Law. See To be liberal and pro-life; Nat Hentoff, Champion of 'Inconvenient Life' by Cathryn Donohoe, Washington Times, November 6, 1989 which discusses the journalism of Nat Hentoff.
- ^ Totenberg, Nina (March 4, 2004). "Documents Reveal Battle to Preserve 'Roe'; Court Nearly Reversed Abortion Ruling, Blackmun Papers Show". Morning Edition. NPR. Retrieved January 30, 2007.
- ^ Greenhouse 2005, pp. 203–06
- ^ Before Roe v. Wade by Linda Greenhouse and Reva B. Siegel, Yale Law School, 2012, pages 260–261 (pages 276–277 of the pdf)
- ^ Casey, 505 U.S. at 55.
- ^ Casey, 505 U.S. at 56.
- ^ The Casey Undue Burden Standard: Problems Predicted and Encountered, and the Split over the Salerno Test by Ruth Burdick, Hastings Constitutional Law Quaterly, Volume 23, Issue 3, Article 8, pages 830–832, (pages 7–9 of the pdf)
- ^ Casey, 505 U.S. at 6.
- ^ Casey, 505 U.S. at 95.
- ^ Casey, 505 U.S. at 102.
- ^ Colautti v. Franklin, 439 U.S. 379 (1979), justia.com, "The viability determination requirement of § 5(a) is void for vagueness."
- ^ Casey, 505 U.S. at 393–394 (Scalia, J., dissenting).
- ^ Casey, 505 U.S. at 989 n.5 (Scalia, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
- ^ Stenberg v. Carhart (99-830) 530 U.S. 914 (2000), Opinion of the Court, law.cornell.edu
- ^ "and it proscribes not only the D&X procedure but also the D&E procedure" Stenberg v. Carhart (99-830) 530 U.S. 914 (2000), O’Connor, J., concurring, law.cornell.edu
- ^ Stenberg v. Carhart (99-830) 530 U.S. 914 (2000), Stevens, J., concurring, law.cornell.edu
- ^ Stenberg v. Carhart (99-830) 530 U.S. 914 (2000), Ginsburg, J., concurring, law.cornell.edu
- ^ Stenberg v. Carhart (99-830) 530 U.S. 914 (2000), Thomas, J., dissenting, law.cornell.edu
- ^ Stenberg v. Carhart (99-830) 530 U.S. 914 (2000), Scalia, J., dissenting, law.cornell.edu
- ^ Stenberg v. Carhart (99-830) 530 U.S. 914 (2000), Rehnquist, C. J., dissenting, law.cornell.edu
- ^ Stenberg v. Carhart, 530 U.S. 914, 958–59 (2000) ("The fetus, in many cases, dies just as a human adult or child would: It bleeds to death as it is torn from limb from limb. The fetus can be alive at the beginning of the dismemberment process and can survive for a time while its limbs are being torn off.").
- ^ "S.3 – Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003". Congress.gov. November 5, 2003. Retrieved May 20, 2019.
- ^ Montopoli, Brian (November 7, 2006). "'Late Term' Vs. 'Partial Birth'". CBS News. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
- ^ a b Nelson, Erin (2013). Law, Policy and Reproductive Autonomy. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 121. ISBN 978-1-78225-155-2.
- ^ a b Mezey, Susan Gluck (2017). Stooksbury, Kara E.; Scheb, John M., II; Stephens, Otis H., Jr (eds.). Encyclopedia of American Civil Rights and Liberties (Revised and Expanded Edition, 2nd ed.). ABC-CLIO. p. 11. ISBN 978-1-4408-4110-1.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) - ^ a b c Stout, David (April 18, 2007). "Supreme Court Upholds Ban on Abortion Procedure". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
- ^ Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. 124 (2007), justia.com, "Congress, it is apparent, responded to these concerns because the Act departs in material ways from the statute in Stenberg."
- ^ Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. 124 (2007), justia.com, "While it found that it was not facially unconstitutional, it did not reject the possibility of an as-applied challenge."
- ^ Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. 124 (2007), justia.com, "We assume the following principles for the purposes of this opinion. Before viability ... Casey, in short, struck a balance. The balance was central to its holding. We now apply its standard to the cases at bar."
- ^ Concurrence (Thomas), Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. 124 (2007), justia.com,
- ^ Greely, Henry T. (2016). The End of Sex and the Future of Human Reproduction. Harvard University Press. p. 285. ISBN 978-0-674-72896-7.
- ^ The National Center For Men, p.7 Archived 2018-05-02 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ Dubay v. Wells Archived 2010-05-27 at the Wayback Machine 442 F.Supp.2d 404 (E. D. Mich., 2006)
- ^ "U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, case No. 06-11016" (PDF).
- ^ a b Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt, 579 U.S. ___ (2016), justia.com
- ^ Denniston, Lyle (June 27, 2016). "Whole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt – Opinion analysis: Abortion rights reemerge strongly". SCOTUSblog. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
- ^ A contractarian approach to the ethics of genetic-selective abortion by Thomas Berry, Journal of Law and the Biosciences, Volume 3, Issue 2, May 4, 2016, page 395, (page 1 of the pdf)
- ^ Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc., oyez.org, accessed January 13, 2022
- ^ 18-483 Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc., May 28. 2019, Opinion of Ginsburg, J. concurring in part and dissenting in part, pages 1–2 (pages 25–26 of the pdf)
- ^ What It Means to Be Human: The Case for the Body in Public Bioethics by O. Carter Snead, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 2020, footnote 146 on pages 294–295
- ^ 18-483 Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc., May 28. 2019, Sotomayor, per curiam, page 4, (page 4 of the pdf)
- ^ 18-483 Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc., May 28. 2019, Opinion of Thomas, J., concurring, page 18 (page 22)
- ^ 18-483 Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc., May 28. 2019, Opinion of Thomas, J., concurring, pages 20–21 (pages 24–25)
- ^ a b Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization: An Opportunity to Correct a Grave Error by Sarah Parshall Perry and Thomas Jipping, Legal Memorandum No. 293, Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies, November 17, 2021, page 16
- ^ Oral Argument, Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health, supremecourt.gov, December 1, 2021
- ^ a b Argument transcript for No. 19-1392, December 1, 2021, Heritage Reporting Corporation, page 76 (page 77 of the pdf)
- ^ Theodore Roosevelt Considered Abortion 'Pre-Natal Infanticide' by Jack H. Burke, National Review, July 11, 2019
- ^ a b The President’s Daughter by Nan Britton, 1928, page 134, republished by a variety of publishers listed on the Worldcat entry; also see The President's Daughter (Britton book)
- ^ Our Island Possessions by Eleanor Roosevelt, Woman's Home Companion, October, 1934
- ^ The Legal Recognition of the National Identity of a Colonized People: The Case of Puerto Rico by Lisa Napoli, Boston College Third World Law Journal, Volume 18, Issue 2, May 1998, page 186 (page 29 of the pdf)
- ^ The Dark History of Forced Sterilization of Latina Women by Katherine Andrews, Panaramas, University of Pittsburgh, October 30, 2017
- ^ a b c d e Table of Supreme Court Justices, Constitution Annotated, constitution.congress.gov
- ^ Puerto Rico and the United States, 1917-1933 by Truman R. Clark, University of Pittsburgh Press, 1975, pages 151–153; Cornelius P. Rhoads § Publicity and investigations describes the political fallout in 1932 after Governor Beverley encouraged birth control use on the island. In addition, the public became aware of a letter written by Rhoads, which stated, "What the island needs is not public health work but a tidal wave or something to totally exterminate the population. It might then be livable."
- ^ In Search of Power: African Americans in the Era of Decolonization, 1956-1974 by Brenda Gayle Plummer, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Cambridge University Press, 2013, page 100
- ^ a b Estampas de nuestra Iglesia by Luis J. Torres Oliver, San Germán, Puerto Rico: Corripio, 1989, page 477
- ^ Buck v. Bell 274 U.S. 200 (1927) at 1–2, justia.com; Buck v. Bell was cited in the Roe majority opinion as evidence that privacy rights were limited. The citation was without any indication of disapproval. See Dworkin, Roger (1996). Limits: The Role of the Law in Bioethical Decision Making. Indiana University Press. p. 57. ISBN 978-0253330758. and Roe, 410 U.S. at 78, justia.com.
- ^ Buck v. Bell 274 U.S. 200 (1927) at 207, justia.com
- ^ Abortion in Puerto Rico: The limits of colonial legality Archived December 23, 2021, at the Wayback Machine by Yamila Azize-Vargas and Luis A. Avilés, Reproductive Health Matters, Volume 5, Number 9, May 1, 1997, page 56 (page 2 of the pdf)
- ^ Does Gutierrez know about Planned Parenthood’s role in Puerto Rican sterilizations? by Casey Mattox, The Hill, October 13, 2015
- ^ Puerto Rico entry in the Eugenics Archive by Ordover, N., Living Archives on Eugenics in Western Canada, February 24, 2014
- ^ a b Stanley Andrews Oral History Interview by Richard D. McKinzie, Harry S. Truman Library, October 31, 1970
- ^ Abortion before Birth Control: The Politics of Reproduction in Postwar Japan by Tiana Norgren, Princeton New Jersy: Princeton University Press, 2001, page 37
- ^ a b c Population Control in Japan: Lessons for India by T. J. Samuel, The Eugenics Review, Volume 58, Number 1, March 1966, pages 19–20 (pages 5–6 of the pdf)
- ^ The Abortion Law of Japan by Sung Yoon Cho, Washington, D.C.: Law Library, Library of Congress, 1988, page 3
- ^ Invading Sexuality: Perception and Response in Postwar Japan, 1945–1957 by John Schneiderwind, University of Kansas, Ph.D. thesis, December 17, 2014, pages 118–119 (pages 124–125 of the pdf), quotation taken from Crawford Sams, Telephone Conversation Between General Whitney and General Sams, February 22, 1950, Materials on the Allied Occupation of Japan – Japanese Diet Library, Microfiche, GS(B)-02021, 1
- ^ Intended Consequences: Birth Control, Abortion, and the Federal Government in Modern America by Donald T. Critchlow, New York: Oxford University Press, 1999, pages 43–44
- ^ General William H. Draper Jr. Oral History Interview by Jerry N. Hess, Harry S. Truman Library, January 11, 1972
- ^ a b The Politics of Abortion and Birth Control in Historical Perspective, edited by Donald T. Critchlow, University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996, page 10. This book was originally published as a special issue of Journal of Policy History, Volume 7, Number 1, 1995.
- ^ The New Social Divide Within The Pink Police State by James Poulos, The Federalist, July 23, 2014
- ^ Waging Peace by Dwight Eisenhower, New York City: Doubleday, 1965, page 504
- ^ JFK, Conservative by Ira Stoll, Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2013, pages 77–78
- ^ "Special Message to the Congress on Domestic Health and Education. | the American Presidency Project".
- ^ The Politics of Abortion and Birth Control in Historical Perspective, edited by Donald T. Critchlow, University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996, page 11. This book was originally published as a special issue of Journal of Policy History, Volume 7, Number 1, 1995.
- ^ From the Archives: LBJ dies, Roe v. Wade ruling, documents.latimes.com
- ^ a b Science at the White House: A Political Liability by Edward J. Burger, Jr, Baltimore, Maryland: Johns Hopkins University Press, pages 133-135, 2019
- ^ New Birth Control Plots by Lonnie Kashif, Muhammad Speaks, Volume 8, Number 36, May 23, 1969, page 34
- ^ Population and the American Future: The Report by the Commission on Population Growth and the American Future, Chairman John D. Rockefeller 3rd, March 27, 1972, section on "Separate Statements", page 148
- ^ A Question of Choice by Sarah Weddington, New York: Penguin Books, 1993, page 135
- ^ in Argument: Laws which restrict or regulate abortion as a special procedure violate the thirteenth amendment by imposing involuntary servitude without due conviction for a crime by Joan K. Bradford, Attorney for Amici Curiae, page 27, part II. There is no compelling state interest to justify impairment of the pregnant woman's fundamental constitutional right to be free from involuntary servitude. section 3, The state's interest in promoting population growth; published In the Supreme Court of the United States, Rehearing, October Term 1972, No. 70-18, Jane Roe, John Doe, and Mary Doe, Appellants, James Hubert Hallford, M.D. Appellant-Intervenor, vs. Henry Wade, Appellee. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas. No. 70-40, Mary Doe et. al., etc., Appellants, Arthur K. Bolton, Attorney General of the State of Georgia, et al., etc., Appellees. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. Amici Curiae Brief on behalf of Organizations and Named Women in Support of Applicants in Each Case.
- ^ Byrn and Roe: The Threshold Question and Juridical Review by Peter J. Riga, The Catholic Lawyer, Volume 23, Number 4, Article 6, page 322, (page 15 of the pdf); also see Abele v. Markle, 342 F. Supp. 800 (D. Conn. 1972) at 803, justia.com
- ^ a b Savage, Charlie (June 23, 2009). "On Nixon Tapes, Ambivalence Over Abortion, Not Watergate". The New York Times. Retrieved July 18, 2009.
- ^ Harnden, Toby. "President Richard Nixon Said it Was 'Necessary' to Abort Mixed-Race Babies, Tapes Reveal," The Daily Telegraph (June 24, 2009).
- ^ Reeves, Richard (2001). President Nixon: Alone in the White House (1st ed.). Simon & Schuster. p. 563. ISBN 978-0-684-80231-2.
The President did not comment directly on the decision.
- ^ Ford, Gerald. Letter to the Archbishop of Cincinnati, published online by The American Presidency Project. Santa Barbara: University of California Press (September 10, 1976).
- ^ Reagan, Ronald. Abortion and the Conscience of the Nation (Nelson 1984).
- ^ Kornblut, Anne E. (January 22, 2000). "Bush Tells Addicts He Can Identify". Boston Globe. p. A12.
- ^ Foran, Clare (June 29, 2018). "The plan to overturn Roe v. Wade at the Supreme Court is already in motion". CNN. Archived from the original on June 29, 2018. Retrieved June 29, 2018.
- ^ Fritz, Sara (August 18, 1992). "'92 Republican Convention: Rigid Anti-Abortion Platform Plank OKd Policy". Los Angeles Times.
President George Bush supported abortion rights until 1980, when he switched sides after Ronald Reagan picked Bush as his running mate.
- ^ Bush, George Herbert Walker.Remarks to Participants in the March for Life Rally (January 23, 1989): "I think the Supreme Court's decision in Roe versus Wade was wrong and should be overturned."
- ^ Carter, James Earl. Larry King Live, CNN, Interview With Jimmy Carter (February 1, 2006). Also see Bourne, Peter, Jimmy Carter: A Comprehensive Biography from Plains to Postpresidency: "Early in his term as governor, Carter had strongly supported family planning programs including abortion in order to save the life of a woman, birth defects, or in other extreme circumstances.
- ^ Jimmy Carter on Abortion: President of the U.S., 1977-1981, ontheissues.org, accessed December 16, 2021
- ^ "Jimmy Carter: Democratic Party Should Be More Pro-Life". RealClearPolitics. March 29, 2012. Retrieved August 25, 2019.
- ^ Clinton, Bill. My Life, p. 229 (Knopf 2004).
- ^ Obama, Barack. "1998 Illinois State Legislative National Political Awareness Test", Project Vote Smart, via archive.org. Retrieved on January 21, 2007.
- ^ Joe Biden's long evolution on abortion rights still holds surprises by Heidi Przybyla, NBC News, June 5, 2019
- ^ Joe Biden Dropped His Support for the Hyde Amendment. Here's How It Became a Flashpoint on Abortion, Time Magazine, June 7, 2019
- ^ The Constitutional Right Not to Kill by Mark L. Rienzi, Emory Law Journal, Volume 62, Issue 1, 2012, pages 148–152 (pages 29–33 of the pdf)
- ^ Douglas Nejaime & Reva Siegel, Conscience Wars: Complicity-Based Conscience Claims in Religion and Politics, 124 Yale Law Journal 2516 (2015).
- ^ Appel, J. M (2005). "Judicial diagnosis 'conscience' vs. Care how refusal clauses are reshaping the rights revolution". Medicine and Health, Rhode Island. 88 (8): 279–81. PMID 16273974.
- ^ a b Vestal, Christine. "States probe limits of abortion policy", Stateline.org (June 11, 2007).
- ^ Marcus, Frances Frank. "Louisiana Moves Against Abortion", The New York Times (July 8, 1989).
- ^ Governor Phil Bryant signs House Bill 1390, governorbryant.com, April 16, 2012 (Archived April 20, 2012) and Gov. Phil Bryant signs House Bill 1390 by Lacey Russell, The Daily Mississippian, April 17, 2012 posted to the newspaper archive on September 30, 2012, (Archived December 21, 2021)
- ^ LZ Granderson "Mississippi's end run around abortion", CNN (July 12, 2012).
- ^ 878 F.Supp.2d 714 (S.D.Miss. 2012), C. A. 3:12cv436-DPJ-FKB, Jackson Women's Health Organization v. Currier, case-law.vlex.com, July 13, 2012
- ^ Jackson Women's Health v. Currier, Civil Action No. 3:12cv436-DPJ-FKB, leagle.com, April 15, 2013 (Archived December 10, 2019)
- ^ No. 13-60599 in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, July 29, 2014, cases.justia.com and Court rules in favor of Miss. abortion clinic by Emily Le Coz, The Clarion-Ledger, July 29, 2014
- ^ Currier v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, scotusblog.com, published by Tom Goldstein and edited by James Romoser, (Archived May 6, 2021) and No. 14-997, Docket Files, U.S. Supreme Court (Archived May 11, 2021)
- ^ Governor Ivey Issues Statement After Signing the Alabama Human Life Protection Act, May 15, 2019, Office of Alabama Governor
- ^ Alabama abortion law passes: Read the bill by Leada Gore, May 16, 2019, Birmingham News
- ^ Federal judge blocks Alabama abortion ban by Abbey Crain, October 29, 2019, Birmingham News
- ^ S.B. No. 8, Texas State Senate
- ^ De Vogue, Ariane (September 1, 2021). "Texas 6-week abortion ban takes effect after Supreme Court inaction". CNN. Retrieved September 2, 2021.
- ^ S.B. No. 8, Texas State Senate, page 9
- ^ 21A24 Whole Woman's Health v. Jackson 594 U. S. ____ (2021), September 1, 2021, supremecourt.gov
- ^ Oral Argument - Audio, United States v. Texas, Docket Number: 21-588, supremecourt.gov, November 1, 2021
- ^ "United States v. Texas, No. 21A85 (No. 21-588), 595 U. S. ____ (Sept. 1, 2021)" (PDF). Supreme Court of the United States. October 22, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Chung, Andrew (October 22, 2021). "U.S. Supreme Court to hear challenge to Texas abortion ban". Reuters. Retrieved October 22, 2021.
- ^ (Slip Opinion), 595 U. S. United States v. Texas (2021), No. 21–588 (21A85), supremecourt.gov, December 10, 2021
- ^ Supreme Court allows lawsuit challenging Texas abortion ban to continue but keeps law in effect for now by Kevin Breuninger and Dan Mangan, CNBC, December 10, 2021
- ^ It stated: "In the early history of our country's colonization and settlement, there was a felt need for more persons. Consequently, population growth was encouraged by anti-abortion law, and importation of slaves was allowed." The following paragraph continued, "Unfortunately, our abortion law is dangerously out of date. Many of are laws and customs still reflect the desires of a nation to fill a frontier. These laws, sensible enough at earlier stages of history when man's survival may have depended on encouraging population maintenance and growth, have become foolish and dangerous in the light of changed circumstances." in Argument: Laws which restrict or regulate abortion as a special procedure violate the thirteenth amendment by imposing involuntary servitude without due conviction for a crime by Joan K. Bradford, Attorney for Amici Curiae, page 26, part II. There is no compelling state interest to justify impairment of the pregnant woman's fundamental constitutional right to be free from involuntary servitude. section 3, The state's interest in promoting population growth; published In the Supreme Court of the United States, Rehearing, October Term 1972, No. 70-18, Jane Roe, John Doe, and Mary Doe, Appellants, James Hubert Hallford, M.D. Appellant-Intervenor, vs. Henry Wade, Appellee. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas. No. 70-40, Mary Doe et. al., etc., Appellants, Arthur K. Bolton, Attorney General of the State of Georgia, et al., etc., Appellees. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia. Amici Curiae Brief on behalf of Organizations and Named Women in Support of Applicants in Each Case.
- ^ Brief Amicus Curiae of the National Right to Life Committee Summary of Argument, Part V. Appellant's Public Policy Arguments are Misplaced, page 59, published In the Supreme Court of the United States, No. 70-18, Jane Roe, et al. Appellants, v. Henry Wade, Appellee. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northenr District of Texas No. 70-40 Mary Doe, et al., Appellants, v. Arthur K. Bolton et al., Appellants, v. Arthur K. Bolton, et al. Appellees. On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.
- ^ a b Roe, 410 U.S. at 116.
- ^ Roe, 410 U.S. at 165.
- ^ Roe v Wade and American Fertility by Phillip B. Levine, Douglas Staigei, Thomas J. Kane, and David J. Zimnmerman, American Journal of Public Health, Volume 89, Number 2, February 1999, page 201 (page 3 of the pdf)
- ^ Myers, Caitlin; Jones, Rachel; Upadhyay, Ushma (July 31, 2019). "Predicted changes in abortion access and incidence in a post-Roe world". Contraception. 100 (5): 367–73. doi:10.1016/j.contraception.2019.07.139. ISSN 0010-7824. PMID 31376381.
- ^ Roe v Wade and American Fertility by Phillip B. Levine, Douglas Staigei, Thomas J. Kane, and David J. Zimnmerman, American Journal of Public Health, Volume 89, Number 2, February 1999, page 202 (page 4 of the pdf)
- ^ U.S. Abortion Policy and Fertility by Jacob Alex Klerman, American Economic Association Papers and Proceedings, May 1999, page 264 (page 4 of the pdf)
- ^ Perceiving and Addressing the Pervasive Racial Disparity in Abortion by James Studnicki, John W. Fisher, and James L. Sherley, Health Services Research and Managerial Epidemiology, Volume 7, January–December 2020
- ^ Fertility and Family Labor Supply: Evidence from the United States by Dung Kieu Nguyen, Asia-Pacific Social Science Review, Volume 19, Number 2, 2019, pages 206 (abstract) and page 215 (conclusion), (pages 1 and 15 of the pdf)
- ^ a b The Impact of Legalized Abortion on Crime by John J. Donohue III and Steven D. Levitt, The Quarterly Journal of Economics Volume 116, Issue 2, May 2001, page 381 (page 3 of the pdf); Also see Freakonomics § The impact of legalized abortion on crime
- ^ Abortion Legalization and Child Living Circumstances: Who is the "Marginal Child?" by Jonathan Gruber, Phillip Levine, and Douglas Staiger, National Bureau of Economic Research, Working Paper 6034, May 1997
- ^ "Gallup: Abortion". Gallup poll. January 6, 2022.
- ^ Saad, Lydia. More Americans "Pro-Life" Than "Pro-Choice" for First Time, Gallup (May 15, 2009).
- ^ "Public Takes Conservative Turn on Gun Control, Abortion Americans Now Divided Over Both Issues", Pew Research Center (April 30, 2009).
- ^ Harris Interactive, (November 9, 2007). "Support for Roe v. Wade Increases Significantly, Reaches Highest Level in Nine Years Archived January 1, 2008, at the Wayback Machine." Retrieved December 14, 2007.
- ^ Harris Interactive. 'U.S. Attitudes Toward Roe v. Wade". The Wall Street Journal Online, (May 4, 2006). Retrieved February 3, 2007.
- ^ a b Results on Roe v. Wade Archived October 13, 2008, at the Wayback Machine via Angus Reid Global Monitor (2007).
- ^ Gallagher, Maggie. "Pro-Life Voters are Crucial Component of Electability", Realclearpolitics.com (May 23, 2007).
- ^ "Analysis | How America feels about abortion". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
- ^ Babies Having (Fewer) Babies by James Taranto, wsj.com OpinionJournal, Dow Jones & Company, April 14, 2005
- ^ How Americans Really Feel About Abortion: The Sometimes Surprising Poll Results As Supreme Court Weighs Overturning Roe V. Wade by Alison Durkee, Forbes, November 30, 2021
Additional references
- Chemerinsky, Erwin (2019). Constitutional Law: Principles and Policies (6th ed.). New York: Wolters Kluwer. ISBN 978-1-4548-9574-9.
- Garrow, David J. (1994). Liberty and Sexuality: The Right to Privacy and the Making of Roe v. Wade. New York: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-02-542755-6.
- Greenhouse, Linda (2005). Becoming Justice Blackmun: Harry Blackmun's Supreme Court Journey. New York: Times Books. ISBN 978-0-8050-7791-9.
- Lee, Evan Tsen (1992). "Deconstitutionalizing Justiciability: The Example of Mootness". Harvard Law Review. 105 (3): 603–69. doi:10.2307/1341536. JSTOR 1341536.
- Malphurs, Ryan A. (2010). ""People Did Sometimes Stick Things in my Underwear": The Function of Laughter at the U.S. Supreme Court" (PDF). Communication Law Review. 10 (2): 48–75. Retrieved August 10, 2013.
- Nowak, John E.; Rotunda, Ronald D. (2012). Treatise on Constitutional Law: Substance and Procedure (5th ed.). Eagan, Minnesota: West Thomson/Reuters. OCLC 798148265.
- Schwartz, Bernard (1988). The Unpublished Opinions of the Burger Court. Oxford University Press. p. 103. ISBN 978-0-19-505317-3.
Further reading
- Critchlow, Donald T. (1996). The Politics of Abortion and Birth Control in Historical Perspective. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 978-0-271-01570-5.
- Critchlow, Donald T. (1999). Intended Consequences: Birth Control, Abortion, and the Federal Government in Modern America. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-504657-1.
- Hull, N. E. H. (2004). The Abortion Rights Controversy in America: A Legal Reader. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-2873-1.
- Hull, N. E. H.; Peter Charles Hoffer (2001). Roe v. Wade: The Abortion Rights Controversy in American History. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-1143-0.
- Mohr, James C. (1979). Abortion in America: The Origins and Evolution of National Policy, 1800–1900. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-502616-0.
- Rubin, Eva R. [ed.] (1994). The Abortion Controversy: A Documentary History. Westport, CT: Greenwood. ISBN 978-0-313-28476-2.
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has generic name (help) - Staggenborg, Suzanne (1994). The Pro-Choice Movement: Organization and Activism in the Abortion Conflict. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-506596-1.
External links
Written opinions
- Works related to Roe v. Wade at Wikisource
- Text of Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973) is available from: Cornell CourtListener Findlaw Google Scholar Justia Library of Congress
- The concurring opinions of Burger and Douglas, as well as White's dissenting opinion, were issued along with Doe v. Bolton and may be found at:
Oral arguments
- Audio of oral arguments, oyez.org, transcripts accompany the audio
- Roe v. Wade Oral Arguments, americanrhetoric.com, first oral argument transcript and audio
- Transcript of First Oral Argument in Roe v. Wade 410 U.S. 113 (1973), aul.org, edited September 2011
- Transcript of Reargument in Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), aul.org, edited September 2011
Other court documents
Other media
- Summary of Roe v. Wade at Lawnix.com
- "Supreme Court Landmark Case Roe v. Wade" from C-SPAN's Landmark Cases: Historic Supreme Court Decisions
- "The Roe Baby", in The Atlantic, September 9, 2021, by Joshua Prager. (Retrieved 9.9.2021.)
- United States Supreme Court cases of the Burger Court
- United States abortion case law
- Right to abortion under the United States Constitution
- History of women's rights in the United States
- United States substantive due process case law
- 1973 in United States case law
- American Civil Liberties Union litigation
- United States mootness case law
- Judicial activism
- Medical lawsuits
- United States privacy case law
- Right to privacy under the United States Constitution