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Description
The question of whether a young woman should be allowed to terminate a pregnancy without her parents' knowledge has been one of the most contentious issues of the post Roe v. Wade era. Parental involvement laws reach to the core of the parent-teen relationship in the highly contested realm of adolescent sexuality. This is the first book to examine in thorough detail the decision-making experiences of teens considering abortion. Shoshanna Ehrlich evaluates the Supreme Court's efforts to reconcile the historically based understanding of teens as dependent persons in need of protection with a more contemporary understanding of them as autonomous individuals with adult-like claims to constitutional recognition.
Arriving at a compromise, the Court has made clear that, like adult women, teens have a protected right of choice, but that states may impose a parental involvement requirement. However, so that parents are not vested with veto power over their daughters' decisions, young women must be allowed to seek a waiver of the requirement. Integrating a wealth of social science literature, including in-depth interviews with 26 young women from Massachusetts who obtained court authorization for an abortion, the book raises important questions about the logic of a legal approach that requires young women to involve adults when they seek to terminate a pregnancy, but that allows them to make a decision to become mothers on their own.
Table of Contents
Series Foreword by Judith Baer
Preface
Acknowledgments
1 A Crime No Longer: Roe v. Wade and the Constitutional Right of Choice
2 Young Women and the Constitutional Right of Choice
3 (Mis)constructing Adolescent Reality: Bellotti v. Baird Reconsidered
4 In Their Own Words
5 Facing an Unplanned Pregnancy: The Abortion Decision
6 Parents or the Judge?
7 Child or Adult? The Indeterminate Legal Status of Adolescents
Conclusion
Notes
Resources
Index
Product details
Published | 30 Apr 2006 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 224 |
ISBN | 9780313016288 |
Imprint | Praeger |
Series | Reproductive Rights and Policy |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Ehrlich explores the social and emotions as well as the legal dimensions of young women who are pregnant but not prepared to bear and raise a child. Her study pivots on the voices of 26 young women from Massachusetts who, under state law, elected to seek court authorization for an abortion rather than obtain consent from a parent. The series will deal with topics about reproduction that are currently contentious in the US, if not anywhere else in the world.
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