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来源类型 | ISSUE BRIEF |
规范类型 | 简报 |
Why Courts Matter: Reproductive Rights | |
April Carson; Liz Chen | |
发表日期 | 2012-10-05 |
出版年 | 2012 |
语种 | 英语 |
概述 | When it comes to issues of women’s rights and health, the federal judiciary will continue to play an instrumental role, and we must actively engage in shaping its composition. |
摘要 |
As advocates, our battles are not limited to the legislative process. They also exist in the courts. For years, conservatives have put a strong emphasis on who dons the robes on the federal bench, understanding that a lifetime appointment can have just as important an impact as legislation, if not more so. But progressives have not made the courts as much of a priority. While conservatives have been stacking the deck against women, appointing judges who will choose ideology over the law, we progressives have focused largely on legislative efforts, which are now in danger of being overturned by the same increasingly conservative judiciary. It is integral to the overall success of a progressive agenda that the president appoint and the Senate confirm men and women who will respect the law and protect women’s fundamental reproductive rights. And it is our responsibility as advocates to hold our elected officials to that standard. Below is a discussion of the federal judiciary’s role in several significant battles over women’s health and rights being waged right now in jurisdictions with openings on the federal bench. Family planning casesTitle X provides federal funds to states to administer family planning services. But some states have targeted Planned Parenthood and any other providers that offer abortion services, even though they provide those abortion services with nongovernment funds. By excluding these providers, states cut off their low-income citizens from vital health services, including contraception, cancer screenings, and treatment for sexually transmitted infections. Two cases with opposite outcomes are instructive in the role the federal courts have in determining whether these restrictions can stand. North CarolinaIn 2011 the North Carolina State Legislature passed a law targeting Planned Parenthood. The law prohibited the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services from allocating any of its funds, including Title X funds, to Planned Parenthood and its affiliates.
TexasA similar story had a different ending in Texas, where the federal circuit court is overwhelmingly dominated by conservatives. In 2011 the Texas Legislature reauthorized the Texas Women’s Health Program, prohibiting “organizations that contract or affiliate with entities that perform or promote elective abortions” from receiving Title X funding. Because some local Planned Parenthood affiliates offer abortion care and because all have a relationship with the national Planned Parenthood, Texas Gov. Rick Perry and other Republican legislators have said they would rather forgo the $35 million in Title X federal funding than permit Planned Parenthood to receive any money. Planned Parenthood has been the Women’s Health Program’s largest provider in Texas, serving about 40 percent of patients.
Biased counseling casesTwenty years ago the Supreme Court established that states could restrict abortion, as long as those constraints did not pose an “undue burden” upon women. As a result, state legislatures have consistently made it harder to obtain an abortion by requiring measures such as waiting periods that involve multiple clinic visits, counseling that includes deceptive information, and ultrasounds without regard to medical necessity. Because “undue burden” is at best a nebulous standard, it matters who is on the bench defining the practical parameters of an undue burden. South DakotaFor the past seven years, South Dakota has tried to enforce a law that, among other things, requires physicians to provide false and misleading information about the risks of suicide and suicidal ideation to women considering abortion.
TexasBy requiring women to endure unwanted invasive ultrasounds regardless of medical need prior to receiving an abortion, the Texas legislature has ignored women’s constitutional rights.
Contraceptive coverage casesThe Affordable Care Act guarantees that employers cover women’s preventive services, including contraceptives, with no cost sharing by employees. While houses of worship are exempted from the rule and religiously affiliated nonprofits are allowed to seek an accommodation and have the insurance company provide the coverage directly to employees, a number of objectors have nevertheless challenged the regulation, claiming that the required coverage infringes on their religious liberty. ColoradoHercules Industries is a for-profit, secular corporation in Colorado that manufactures and distributes heating, ventilation, and air conditioning products and equipment. One day before filing a lawsuit in the District Court of Colorado challenging the contraception requirement, the owners added two provisions to the articles of incorporation: (1) that the primary purpose of the corporation was to follow “appropriate religious, ethical or moral standards,” and (2) that its board of directors was allowed to prioritize “religious, ethical or moral standards” at the expense of profitability.
ConclusionAs progressives, we cannot afford to ignore the courts. When it comes to issues of women’s rights and health, the federal judiciary will continue to play an instrumental role, and we must actively engage in shaping its composition. April Carson is the Deputy Director of Legal Progress at the Center for American Progress. Liz Chen is a Policy Analyst with the Women’s Health and Rights Program at the Center. |
主题 | Courts |
URL | https://www.americanprogress.org/issues/courts/reports/2012/10/05/40701/why-courts-matter-reproductive-rights/ |
来源智库 | Center for American Progress (United States) |
资源类型 | 智库出版物 |
条目标识符 | http://119.78.100.153/handle/2XGU8XDN/435346 |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | April Carson,Liz Chen. Why Courts Matter: Reproductive Rights. 2012. |
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文件名称/大小 | 资源类型 | 版本类型 | 开放类型 | 使用许可 | ||
LegalProgressNominat(127KB) | 智库出版物 | 限制开放 | CC BY-NC-SA | 浏览 |
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