Rights have moral content. Both the right to choose to have an abortion and the total prohibition against the procurement of an abortion based on the right to life or personhood of the fetus are steeply embedded in morality. Moreover, constitutional adjudication in general and even ordinary adjudication in many cases – e.g., should victims of industrial pollution be compensated for their impaired health – inevitably raise moral questions and call for answers that require making moral judgments, or that at least have signifi cant moral implications. The purpose of this chapter is to determine whether judges can avoid being moral arbiters; whether they ought to be moral arbiters; or whether inevitable questions of morality tied to the grant and protection of (constitutional) rights ought to be entrusted to others, such as the constituent power, legislators, etc. The chapter will test these issues in relation to the existing constitutional jurisprudence relating to abortion, gauged from a comparative perspective. Part 2 will provide a critical assessment of the theoretical debate; Part 3, an examination of insights stemming from relevant constitutional jurisprudences on abortion, and, Part 4 a theory about the optimal apportionment of responsibility for determining the moral issues that arise in the context of the recognition, interpretation and implementation of constitutionalized fundamental rights.

The Judge as Moral Arbiter? The Case of Abortion / S. Mancini; M. Rosenfeld. - STAMPA. - (2010), pp. 299-315.

The Judge as Moral Arbiter? The Case of Abortion

MANCINI, SUSANNA;
2010

Abstract

Rights have moral content. Both the right to choose to have an abortion and the total prohibition against the procurement of an abortion based on the right to life or personhood of the fetus are steeply embedded in morality. Moreover, constitutional adjudication in general and even ordinary adjudication in many cases – e.g., should victims of industrial pollution be compensated for their impaired health – inevitably raise moral questions and call for answers that require making moral judgments, or that at least have signifi cant moral implications. The purpose of this chapter is to determine whether judges can avoid being moral arbiters; whether they ought to be moral arbiters; or whether inevitable questions of morality tied to the grant and protection of (constitutional) rights ought to be entrusted to others, such as the constituent power, legislators, etc. The chapter will test these issues in relation to the existing constitutional jurisprudence relating to abortion, gauged from a comparative perspective. Part 2 will provide a critical assessment of the theoretical debate; Part 3, an examination of insights stemming from relevant constitutional jurisprudences on abortion, and, Part 4 a theory about the optimal apportionment of responsibility for determining the moral issues that arise in the context of the recognition, interpretation and implementation of constitutionalized fundamental rights.
2010
Constitutional Topography: Values and Constitutions
299
315
The Judge as Moral Arbiter? The Case of Abortion / S. Mancini; M. Rosenfeld. - STAMPA. - (2010), pp. 299-315.
S. Mancini; M. Rosenfeld
File in questo prodotto:
Eventuali allegati, non sono esposti

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/91587
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact