Abortion, the Disabilities of Pregnancy, and the Dignity of Risk

M. Case
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Abstract

When abortion is discussed in the context of destigmatizing disability, it is usually in connection with the potential disabilities of the fetus. Disability rights activists increasingly encourage both lawmakers setting abortion policy and women contemplating abortion not to think that a life with disabilities is not worth living. In particular, they argue that a fetus diagnosed with Down syndrome, let alone one with a cleft palate, should not for that reason be aborted. While taking this line of argument into account, this chapter will shift the frame of reference to various ways in which the law and bioethics of abortion treat the pregnant woman as disabled. The examples presented come from the abortion jurisprudence of the United States and the Federal Republic of Germany. In the U.S. Supreme Court decision of Gonzalez v. Carhart, a decision about so-called late-term partial birth abortions often undertaken after a diagnosis of fetal disability, Justice Kennedy’s emphasis on the human dignity at stake infamously did not center on the dignity of either the disabled fetus or the pregnant woman, but on the abstract dignity of the human being, which he saw as imperiled by allowing physicians to elect a method of abortion that could be seen too closely to resemble childbirth. Even more infamously, Kennedy used the opinion to validate the claim that women might come to regret their abortion and should therefore perhaps be legally disabled from obtaining it. Using concepts developed by disability rights advocates, I shall argue that what Kennedy is denying to women is the dignity of risk: even assuming arguendo that women are indeed likely to regret their abortion, treating them as incompetent to make this potentially regrettable decision denies them their full human dignity. German abortion law, which also centers on human dignity, treats the pregnant woman contemplating a late-term abortion because of diagnosed fetal disabilities as disabled in a somewhat different way—it presumes women carrying fetuses with disabilities are under sufficient mental strain (or will be once their disabled child is born) that they qualify for a legal abortion because of the pregnancy’s effect on the mental health of the mother. Although more of a legal workaround than a well-thought out jurisprudential or bioethical position, this approach, like Kennedy’s, works to disable (pun intended) the pregnant woman albeit in service of facilitating rather than preventing her access to a legal abortion. Kennedy’s retirement from the Supreme Court might call the continuing viability of his approach into question. But, in cases heading toward the Court and in the approach of his successor, there are worrisome echoes of Kennedy in Carhart. For example, two now pending cert. petitions deal with statutory schemes potentially inspired by Kennedy’s Carhart opinion. And Kavanagh, Kennedy’s replacement, wrote, while a circuit court judge, opinions in two cases whose fact patterns centered on particular disabilities faced by pregnant persons in government custody—pregnant minor immigrants in detention for unlawful entry into the United States and intellectually disabled pregnant women in the care of the District of Columbia Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Administration (“DCMRDDA”). Like Kennedy in Carhart, Kavanaugh was disturbingly comfortable allowing government paternalistically to restrict the choices of those who are pregnant. Conceding that all pregnant women are vulnerable, and those carrying fetuses diagnosed with disabilities perhaps especially so, this chapter will argue that translating those vulnerabilities into the sort of legal disability that women labored under historically is not a productive way forward. Acknowledging that pregnant women should have the dignity of risk is one of several preferable approaches.
堕胎,怀孕的残疾,和风险的尊严
当堕胎在去污名化残疾的背景下被讨论时,它通常与胎儿的潜在残疾有关。残疾人权利活动人士越来越多地鼓励制定堕胎政策的立法者和考虑堕胎的妇女不要认为残疾的生活不值得过下去。特别是,他们认为,一个被诊断患有唐氏综合症的胎儿,更不用说一个腭裂的胎儿,不应该因为这个原因而流产。在考虑到这一论点的同时,本章将把参考框架转移到堕胎的法律和生物伦理将孕妇视为残疾人的各种方式上。所举的例子来自美国和德意志联邦共和国的堕胎法。在美国最高法院对Gonzalez v. Carhart一案的裁决中,一项关于所谓的晚期部分分娩堕胎的裁决通常是在胎儿残疾诊断后进行的,肯尼迪大法官对人类尊严的强调臭名昭著地不是集中在残疾胎儿或孕妇的尊严上,而是集中在人类抽象的尊严上,他认为,允许医生选择一种流产方法是危险的,因为这种方法可能被看得太近而不像分娩。更臭名昭著的是,肯尼迪利用这一观点证实了这样一种说法,即妇女可能会对自己的堕胎感到后悔,因此可能在法律上被禁止堕胎。利用残疾人权利倡导者提出的概念,我认为肯尼迪否认了妇女承担风险的尊严:即使假设妇女确实可能会后悔自己的堕胎,把她们视为没有能力做出这个可能令人遗憾的决定,也剥夺了她们作为人的全部尊严。同样以人的尊严为中心的德国堕胎法,以一种不同的方式对待因诊断为胎儿残疾而考虑进行晚期堕胎的孕妇——它假定怀有残疾胎儿的妇女处于足够的精神压力下(或者一旦她们的残疾孩子出生就会如此),由于怀孕对母亲精神健康的影响,她们有资格进行合法堕胎。虽然这更多的是一种法律上的变通,而不是经过深思熟虑的法律或生物伦理立场,但这种方法,就像肯尼迪的方法一样,是为了使孕妇失去能力(双关语),尽管是为了促进而不是阻止她获得合法堕胎的机会。肯尼迪从最高法院退休可能会使他的方法的持续可行性受到质疑。但是,在提交最高法院的案件中,在他的继任者的做法中,卡哈特身上有令人担忧的肯尼迪的影子。例如,目前正在审理的两个证书申请涉及可能受到肯尼迪的卡哈特意见启发的法定方案。代替肯尼迪的卡瓦纳在担任巡回法院法官期间撰写了两起案件的意见,这两起案件的事实模式集中在政府拘留的孕妇面临的特殊残疾问题上——因非法进入美国而被拘留的怀孕未成年移民和由哥伦比亚特区智力迟钝和发育障碍管理局(DCMRDDA)照顾的智力残疾孕妇。就像卡哈特案中的肯尼迪一样,卡瓦诺允许政府以家长式的方式限制孕妇的选择,这令人不安。承认所有的孕妇都是脆弱的,而那些怀着被诊断为残疾的胎儿的孕妇可能尤其如此,本章将论证将这些脆弱转化为女性在历史上所承受的那种法律上的残疾并不是一种富有成效的前进方式。承认孕妇应该有承担风险的尊严是几个较好的方法之一。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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