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Constitutional Law

Fordham Law School

Journal

Abortion

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Law

Winter Count: Taking Stock Of Abortion Rights After Casey And Carhart, Caitlin E. Borgmann Jan 2004

Winter Count: Taking Stock Of Abortion Rights After Casey And Carhart, Caitlin E. Borgmann

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This article outlines the current landscape of the constitutional right to abortion established in Roe v. Wade. Analyzing the court's holdings in Planned Parenthood v. Casey and Stenberg v. Carhart, the author details the ways in which recognition of a government interest in potential life at any stage in a pregnancy, as well as the lofty "undue burden" standard in analyzing policies that hinder access to abortion, have eroded this right. Finally, the author stresses the Supreme Court cases' disparate impact on the abortion rights of low-income and rural dwelling women.


What Lawrence V. Texas Says About The History And Future Of Reproductive Rights, Cynthia Dailard Jan 2004

What Lawrence V. Texas Says About The History And Future Of Reproductive Rights, Cynthia Dailard

Fordham Urban Law Journal

This article explores the ways in which the court's recognition of a broad zone of personal liberty in Lawrence v. Texas may serve to strengthen a woman's constitutionally protected reproductive rights in future Supreme Court decisions. Part of the author's analysis focuses on using particular Justices' opinions (and dissents) to predict the direction of future challenges to abortion rights in front of the Supreme Court.


Casey And Its Impact On Abortion Regulation, Michael F. Moses Jan 2004

Casey And Its Impact On Abortion Regulation, Michael F. Moses

Fordham Urban Law Journal

Given the Supreme Court's shift from a strict scrutiny standard to an "undue burden" standard in Planned Parenthood v. Casey, this article advocates for application of the standard in a way that is deferential to state legislatures. The author finds a number of problems with the holding in Casey for which it seeks judicial and legislative action: the undue burden standard is vague; it is unclear whether the burden should be upon everyone or "some people"; and the holding allows court to strike laws that have not gone into effect, therefore evidence of their impact is "speculative."


Lethal Experimentation On Human Beings: Roe's Effect On Bioethics, William L. Saunders, Jr. Jan 2004

Lethal Experimentation On Human Beings: Roe's Effect On Bioethics, William L. Saunders, Jr.

Fordham Urban Law Journal

Beginning with the assumption that human life begins at conception, this article explores the problematic terrain accompanying embryonic stem cell research and human cloning. "Lethal Experimentation on Human Beings," as enumerated in the article's title, refers to experimentation on and the removal of stem cells from human embryos, both of which "kill" a human being. The article warns that the holding in Roe v. Wade, which recognizes only a qualified government interest in unborn life, has obscured a pressing need for proponents of embryonic stem cell research to prove why society's interest in this research outweighs the rights of the …