Columbia Public Law & Legal Theory Working Papers
Document Type
Article
Comments
Columbia Journal of Gender and Law Vol. 18:2.
Abstract
Much attention has been paid to the harm women suffer when they are unable to get abortions, or, from an anti-abortion perspective, what women are said to suffer by virtue of having abortions. There has, however, been little discussion of the harms women suffer by virtue of abortion regulation, even when they are, in the end, able to obtain a legal abortion. What is the relation between the detailed regulation of abortion decisions and the right of women to be treated with dignity regarding such decisions?
This Article considers the harms to dignity inflicted on one category of women - pregnant minors - by virtue of their participation the judicial bypass process. Thirty four states now requirement that a minor wants an abortion without first involving her parents must petition a judge and participate in a hearing at which the judge decides if she is mature and informed enough to make an abortion decision herself. By compelling narrative, the hearings produce a distinct sort of harm: the humiliation of vulnerable minors required to testify about their sexual relationships, their pregnancy, and the intricacies of home life that decided them to take their chances in court. I develop the argument that bypass hearings produce a civil version of what Malcolm Feeley identified in the criminal context as “process as punishment.” Several features of the hearings work to bring this about. These include a structure of stealth inherent in the proceedings, and the testimonial demands of a hearing too often focused on the moral misconduct (sex, abortion, general sneakiness) of the petitioners.
Bypass hearings harm the legal system as well as individual petitioners. The Article discusses the problem of sham hearings (akin to fault based divorce proceedings), the problem of forum exclusion and law’s legitimacy, and the relation of dignity to the “luck of the draw” aspect of judicial assignment. The Article focuses specially on the election of judges and the politics of abortion in their selection and performance.
Date of Authorship for this Version
Fall 11-1-2009
Keywords
Human-rights, rights, soveriegnty, globalization, right-to-health, right-to-education
Recommended Citation
Sanger, Carol, "Decisional Dignity: Teenage Abortion, Bypass Hearings and the Misuse of Law" (2009). Columbia Public Law & Legal Theory Working Papers. Paper 9176.
http://lsr.nellco.org/columbia_pllt/9176