Human rights and the unborn child:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Leiden [u.a.]
Nijhoff
2009
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XVIII, 347 S. |
ISBN: | 9789004175600 |
Internformat
MARC
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010 | |a 2009021220 | ||
020 | |a 9789004175600 |c hardback : alk. paper |9 978-90-04-17560-0 | ||
035 | |a (OCoLC)633529646 | ||
035 | |a (DE-599)GBV60056634X | ||
040 | |a DE-604 |b ger |e aacr | ||
041 | 0 | |a eng | |
049 | |a DE-355 |a DE-11 | ||
084 | |a PR 2213 |0 (DE-625)139532: |2 rvk | ||
100 | 1 | |a Joseph, Rita |e Verfasser |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Human rights and the unborn child |c by Rita Joseph |
264 | 1 | |a Leiden [u.a.] |b Nijhoff |c 2009 | |
300 | |a XVIII, 347 S. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
650 | 0 | |a Unborn children (Law) | |
650 | 0 | |a Right to life | |
650 | 0 | |a Abortion / Law and legislation | |
650 | 0 | |a Human rights | |
650 | 4 | |a Menschenrecht | |
650 | 4 | |a Recht | |
650 | 4 | |a Abortion / Law and legislation | |
650 | 4 | |a Human rights | |
650 | 4 | |a Right to life | |
650 | 4 | |a Unborn children (Law) | |
856 | 4 | 2 | |m Digitalisierung UB Regensburg |q application/pdf |u http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017753563&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |3 Inhaltsverzeichnis |
999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-017753563 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804139415081058304 |
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adam_text | Table
of Contents
Introduction
xvii
Chapter
ι
UDHR Recognition of the Child before Birth: Analysis of the
Texts
ι
A context of inclusiveness
ι
Evidence of UN consensus
—
the child before birth included
in human rights protection
2
Refuting only in the preamble ^nd only
a Dedaratioďdaims
з
Chapter
2
UDHR Recognition of the Child before Birth: The Historical
Context
7
Inclusive meaning
—
the child before as well as after birth
7
Geneva Declaration of the Rights of the Child
(1924) 8
Nuremberg Trials
(1947/8)
..protection of the law was de¬
nied to the unborn children...
10
First Draft of the International Covenant
(1947)—
from the
moment of conception
12
Post-World War II Geneva Conventions
12
Fourth Geneva Convention
(1949) 13
Geneva Protocol II
(1977) 14
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime
of Genocide
(1948) 14
Draft American Declaration of the International Rights and
Duties of Man
(1948)— ..
.the right to life from the moment
of conception
15
World Medical Association Declaration of Geneva
(1948)—
the utmost respect for human life from the time of conception
16
American Declaration of the International Rights and Duties
of Man
(1948) 16
International Code of Medical Ethics
(1949)—
the impor¬
tance of preserving human life from the time of conception
20
Draft Declaration on the Rights of the Child
(1950)—
even
from before birth
21
European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights
and Fundamental Freedoms
(1950)
21
Draft Declaration on the Rights of the Child
(1957)
24
UN Declaration of the Rights of the Child
(1959)— ..
.legal
protection before as well as after birth
24
Draft American Convention on Human Rights
(1959)—
pro¬
tected by law from the moment of conception
25
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
(1966)-—
to save the life of an unborn child*
26
vi
Table of
Contents
Chapter
з
Chapter
4
American Convention on Human Rights
(1969)—
in general,
from the moment of conception
28
Fundamentals of the Universal Declaration s Human Rights
Protection
31
Legally binding principles
31
UDHR recognition of child before birth still pertained in
1959
32
Irrevocable nature of Universal Declaration tied to inalienabil¬
ity of human rights
33
Universal human rights
—
natural, inalienable, a permanent guide
35
Recognition of natural-law rights
—
clarified through Holo¬
caust experience
35
Absolutely no one to be excluded from human rights protection
36
Universal Declaration and the fragility of medical ethics
37
Moral Relativism
—
no place in the Universal Declaration
39
Natural-law principles declared by the drafters to be universal
39
Universal rights
—
a bulwark against ideological manipulation
41
Never Again! commitment at the heart of the
Universal Declaration
42
Inherent dignity and children at risk of abortion
43
Dehumanizing language cannot legitimize human rights violations
44
Universal Declaration built on the inherence view of human rights
45
The Inaugural Human Right—To Be Born Free and Equal
47
Rights of the child exist before birth
47
Being human confers human rights
—
not the act of being born
48
Each child existentially unique
—
the same child before as
well as after birth
48
Children before birth
—
human beings without frills
48
UDHR Article
1:
Reason, conscience and the spirit of brotherhood
49
Reason and the rules of conscience
50
Acting in the spirit of brotherhood
—
Everyone has duties to
the community...
51
Current ideological revamping of Article
1—
invalid
53
Restoring the word born to its true context
55
The real issue at stake
—
are rights inherent or are they
granted by governments?
56
Excluding the idea of hereditary slavery
57
Article
1
should state the philosophical basis of human rights
58
Verdoodt on abortion in the drafting history of the Universal
Declaration
59
Conforming domestic abortion legislation to human rights
principles
60
Misreading post-World War II Declaration with a 21st century bias
61
Table
of
Contents
vii
Chapter
s
What Is Appropriate Legal Protection Before As Well As After
Birth?
63
Non-discriminatory legal protection
63
Applying the human rights principle
—
without distinction
of any kind
64
Appropriate legal protection
—
part of special safeguards
entitlement
64
Inappropriate legal status
—
the child before birth an inferior being?
65
Appropriate legal protection
—
the right to recognition as a
person before the law
66
Cassin and Roosevelt on juridical personality
66
Denying legal personality to the child before birth
—
a pun¬
ishment by civil death
67
The child before birth entitled to the same legal protection
as after birth
68
Appropriate legal protection
—
equal before the law and
equal protection of the law
69
Appropriate legal protection
—
protection of the law against
arbitrary interference
70
Decriminalization of abortion
—
incompatible with appropri¬
ate legal protection
72
Legalization of abortion
—
incompatible with appropriate
legal protection
74
Appropriate legal protection
—
universality, objectivity and
nonselectivity
74
Appropriate legal protection
...
meeting the just require¬
ments of morality, public order and the general welfare.
.. 75
Legalized abortion is
..
.contrary to the purposes and prin¬
ciples of the United Nations
77
Recognition of human rights prohibits destruction of any of
the rights
77
Children at risk of abortion
—
protected by the rule of law
78
Chapter
6
The Right to Life and to the Necessities of Life
81
Each individual has the right to physical existence
81
Everyone has the right to life.
.. 82
Procured abortion contravenes principles of necessity and
proportionality
83
Procured abortion not within recognized exceptions to the
right to life
84
Everyone has the right to.
..
liberty
84
Unwantedness—attitudinal prejudice—not a reason for abortion
85
Procured abortion
—
an exercise of ownership over the child
in
utero
86
Everyone has the right to.
.
.security of person
87
viii Table of
Contents
Socially guaranteed necessities of life for child s survival and
development
88
Guarding children against measures intended to prevent
their birth
89
..
.the right to physical integrity from the moment of conception
90
The right to life and Article
5 91
Legal protection against .
.
.cruel treatment
92
Legal protection against .
.
.inhuman treatment
94
Legal protection against .
.
.degrading treatment
94
Legal protection against ...cruel, inhuman or degrading...
punishment
94
Right to life—the right to the necessities of life for mother
and her unborn child
95
Mothers and children at risk of abortion— entitled to special
care and assistance
96
The right .
.
.to share in scientific advancement and its benefits
98
Abortion
—
part of ktenology, the science of killing
—
not
genuine health care
99
Asocial and international order in which the right to life is
fully realized
101
Chapter
7
Decriminalization
—
A Treaty Interpretation Manifestly
Unreasonable
103
In accordance with the Declaration of Human Rights
103
UN Declaration principles
—
of great and lasting significance
104
Reinterpretation of human rights instruments to exclude the
child before birth: legally and morally an invalid process
106
Decriminalization of abortion
—
a result.
..
manifestly unreasonable
107
Decriminalization
—
a most inappropriate legal protection for
the child at risk of abortion
108
Convention on the Rights of the Child
—
appropriate legal
protection no
Attempts to gut appropriate legal protection of meaning for
the child before birth in
Reading appropriate legal protection for the child as primarily
a women s rights statement?
112
Each State determines for itself what is appropriate legal
protection ?
113
Human rights not constricted by existing national legislation
113
Conventions and Declarations on which they are based must
be logically compatible
115
Tracing the path from Declaration to Convention
115
Pre-natal care and protection
—
provided both to him and to
his mother
116
Table
of
Contents ix
Applying the general principles of the
CRC
inclusively
118
1.
Non-discrimination
118
2.
The best interests of the child
119
3.
The child s inherent right to life
120
Inclusiveness fundamental to all human rights treaties
120
Chapter
8 CRC
Legislative History and the Child Before Birth
121
Strong support for recognition of the rights of the unborn child
121
Preamble integral to the Convention
121
Long tradition of human rights protection before as well as
after birth
123
Legislative history supports before as well as after birth hu¬
man rights protection
124
Protecting liberal abortion laws or protecting the child
before birth?
125
Ideological reinterpretation of human rights
127
The Polish contribution
128
Child s right to pre-natal care
—
inconsistent with legal abortion
130
Ascertaining . ..the form and scope of legal protection of the
child before birth
131
Examining resistance to legal protection for the child before birth
133
ICCPR consensus on when life begins
135
No margin of appreciation on the form and scope of the
child s right to life
136
Historical context invalidates Lopatka s claims
138
Chapter
9
Selective Abortion on Grounds of Disability
141
Reclaiming the human rights of children with disabilities at
risk of abortion
141
Preambles
—
negligible or significant?
142
Ensuring
..
.appropriate legal protection before as well as
after birth
142
Selective abortion; discrimination against children
—
a seri¬
ous violation of rights
143
Recalling that .
..
protection of the law was denied to the
unborn children... (Nuremberg)
ИЗ
Decriminalization of abortion
—
condemned at Nuremberg
144
Systematic abortion
—
a crime against humanity
147
Convention reaffirms that person means every human being
148
Human rights not to be subjected to vexatious tests of
personhood H9
Childrerï with
rights to prenatal care
—
not just foetuses
150
No abortion rights in Convention on the Rights of Persons
with Disabilities 152
Exposing attitudes of stigmatization and rejection*
153
χ
Table of
Contents
Decriminalization of abortion
—
contravenes General Prin¬
ciples ofConvention
154
..
.the hidden message.
.
.that they should not been born
anymore
155
Children with disabilities.
.
.a right to respect.
.
.a right to be
different
—
not a reason for abortion
155
Aborting children with disabilities
—
abrogating respect
for difference
157
Selective abortion, foetal abnormalities and the non-dis¬
crimination principle
157
Selective abortion
—
exclusion on the basis of disability
158
Prenatal care on an equal basis with other children
159
Children in situations of risk... and pre-natal testing
160
State s obligation to raise awareness and to foster respect
163
..including those who require more intensive support
163
Adequate standard of social protection for children and families
164
Restoring legal protection for children with disabilities at risk
of abortion
165
Children with disabilities
—
equal recognition before the law
166
..
.appropriate and effective safeguards to prevent abuse
167
Preventative measures against cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment
167
Abortion
—
an act of violence, a lethal form of abuse
168
Child-focused protective legislation and policies
169
Progressive corruption of human rights language
170
An excess of Down Syndrome births?
171
Principle of indivisibility
—
human rights protection for
mother and unborn child
173
Changing discriminatory attitudes among medical professionals
175
The principle of best interests of the child
176
When human reason begins to rationalize its own extermi¬
natory projects...
177
Chapter
10
European Convention
(1950)
and the Unborn Child
179
European Court s margin of appreciation incompatible with
non-derogable right to life
180
..
.no one knows the meaning of everyone ?
181
..
.and I find it frightening (Dissenting European Court Judge)
183
Denying the right to exist shocks the conscience of mankind
184
Historical background to the European Convention
185
Decriminalization of abortion-evidence at Nuremberg for
the count of crimes against humanity
186
Merging Hippocratic ethics and human rights into a single code
187
States must at all times take positive steps to protect the
right to life
188
Table
of
Contents
xi
Legalization of abortion
—
regulating abortion as a health
procedure
189
Making abortion a simple and pleasant affair
190
...the greatest crime being co-operation in...murder, sui¬
cide and abortion (British Medical Association
1947) 191
...
utmost respect for human life from the time of concep¬
tion Declaration of Geneva
192
Historical evidence for consensus on legal protection before birth
192
1. No record of exclusion of the unborn child from human
rights protection
193
2.
Modelled on the draft Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights as it existed in
1950 193
3.
UDHR recognition of the rights of the child before birth
194
4.
Common heritage of the rule of law
195
5.
Same parties to the European Convention and UN Dec¬
laration on the Rights of the Child
196
6.
European Court established to ensure observance of
codified UDHR obligations
196
7.
Absence of formal reservations regarding the right to
life
196
8.
in the light of its object and purpose
197
A living
documents^pproach
masks disturbing rupture, not
organic growth
198
unborn foetus or child before birth ?
200
UDHR
—
the permanent accession of every human being to
the rank of member of human society (Cassin)
201
The European Court and the limits of authority
202
When conflict develops between universal natural law prin¬
ciples and domestic law
204
Erroneous reasoning by European Court in
Tysiąc
v
Poland
206
Right to life overrides respect for private life
207
Given enough rope
—
European Court now entangled in
ideological deceits
208
Growing criticism of the European Court s abortion decisions
209
Court needs more intellectual integrity, more moral fortitude
211
Chapter
η
American Convention on Human Rights: ...in general, from
the moment of conception
213
person means every human being...
213
Human rights, not person rights 215
1981
Baby Boy Resolution-—ideologically driven misinterpretation
217
Misconstrual of the drafting history of the
1948
American
Declaration 218
Right to life of the unborn— not discussed or put in doubt
by anyone 218
xii
Table
of
Contents
Errors of historical fact in majority resolution
220
Resolving conflict between Declaration principles and laws in
some American States
222
..
.including those who are not yet born
222
Baby Boy Resolution
—
wrong on question faced by drafters
of the Declaration
224
Convention s drafting history confirms right to life from the
moment of conception
225
Negotiating the inclusion of the phrase from the moment of
conception
225
Getting the Bogota Declaration right
—
a reaffirmation, not a
modification
226
The meaning
ofin
general
—
substantially different or totally
different?
227
Keeping the text without change for reasons of principle
228
Clearing up two practical issues
228
Inter-American Court yet to pronounce on rights protection
for the unborn
230
Ten principles from the Inter-American Court ensuring rights
are permanently protected
231
1.
Equality before the law (Article
24) 231
2.
Principle of non-discrimination (Articlei.i)
232
3.
Inherency of human rights
233
4.
Judicial guarantee of the right to life
233
5.
The need to balance competing interests with the need
to preserve the Convention s object and purpose
234
6.
The non-derogability of the right to life
236
7.
Localized majorities may not pass laws in violation of
universal human rights
237
8.
No permissible limitation on a right may entail the total
denial of that right
239
9.
interpretation must be guided by the primacy of the
text
240
10.
Domestic law may not be invoked to justify nonfulfill¬
ment of human rights obligations
240
Canadian Government s ironic endorsement of the inclusive
meaning of Article
4(1) 241
Chapter
12
Reclaiming Rights of the African Child at Risk of Abortion
245
Reasons for revoking new authorising medical abortion
Protocol language
245
Abortion language irreconcilable with human rights
246
Abortion language incompatible with African values
246
Abortion language contravenes
noť^upplements^he
Afri¬
can Charter
247
Table of
Contents xiii
Medical abortion contravenes Articles
4
and
5
of the
African Charter
248
Abortion language contravenes International Bill of Rights
249
Aborting children for sins of their fathers
—
prohibited punishment
250
Abortion of her child compounds abused mother s tragedy
251
A child in her womb threatens the mental and physical
health of the mother?
252
Evidence supports making pregnancy safer
253
Authorization of abortion ignores legal principles of neces¬
sity and proportionality
255
Women s Protocol
іб(с)
on abortion lacks logic
256
Women s Protocol contradicts the Charter to which it pur¬
ports to be a protocol
257
Authorization of abortion violates the African Child s Human
Rights Charter
257
Authorization of abortion contrary to Declaration on the
Rights of the African Child
258
Women s Protocol spurns African values
259
State s duty to assist mothers
259
State s duty to ensure understanding of corresponding
obligations
260
Authorizing abortion violates human rights principle of
indivisibility
261
Protecting child s rights -the duty of individuals and the State
261
African values: the child s right to parental care and protection
262
Authorizing abortion
—
grave breach of the inalienable rights
of the child
262
Chapter
13
Selective Abortion: An Act of Violence and Discrimination on
Grounds of Sex
265
Reclaiming the rights of the girl-child at risk of abortion
265
Selective abortion
—
prenatal sex selection as an act of vio¬
lence
—
Beijing Platform for Action
266
Grave discrepancies emerging on selective abortion
267
Serious logical inconsistencies as long as ideology prevails
over truth
268
Prenatal sex selection threatens to expose weakness of abor¬
tion arguments
269
All selective abortions
—
in contravention of Rights of the
Child Convention
270
..
.girls are more likely to be killed in the womb
271
Parents tampering with biological laws— a tragedy of the
commons
273
China s one child policy exacerbates sex-selective abortion
274
India s sex-selective abortion debacle: ...they don t want to
xiv
Table
of
Contents
abort their babies 275
Visibility and abortion violence
276
No room for any level of legalized violence against children
277
Selective abortion
—
not just sex discrimination but also an
act of violence
278
To decriminalize sex-selective abortion or to enforce protec¬
tive legislation?
278
Selective abortion as an act of violence
—
conceptual vio¬
lence only?
279
Emerging necessity to monitor reasons for all abortions
280
An immovable barrier of logic and reason proscribes abor¬
tion rights
281
Chapter
14
Children s Rights
..
.without any exceptions whatsoever
283
Reclaiming the right to life for children of rape or incest
283
Protective laws against arbitrary deprivation of life for unborn
children
283
Recognition of the existence of another human being in
utero
286
Rape and incest
—
arbitrary exceptions purporting to justify
lawful abortion
286
Extreme negativity of the radical feminist view of pregnancy
289
Provide adequate pre-natal and post-natal care
—
not more
abortions
290
UN Committee on the Rights of the Child
—
prenatal care for
children
291
Inconsistency between the child s right to adequate prena¬
tal care and legal abortion
291
Discrimination on grounds of social origin prohibited
292
Abortion an inappropriate response to rape or incest
—
an¬
other act of violence, another victim
292
Abortion
—
lethal punishment of the innocent
293
Aborting her child does not restore a mother s health
295
Abortion flouts legal principles of proportionality and necessity
296
Pressuring mothers to abort their children
297
Irrational prejudice transfers public censure of rape and
incest to innocent children
298
The healing power of a little child
299
Conclusion Ideologies Must Conform to Human Rights
—
Not Human
Rights to Ideologies
301
Decriminalization of abortion
—
an ideological aberration
301
When an ideology hijacks human rights
302
The Feminist Revolution and abortion rights
—
the op¬
pressed have become the oppressors
303
UN Human Rights Committee compromised
304
Table
of
Contents xv
Right to life of the child at risk of abortion
—
not a private matter
304
No State may resile from the human rights in the Interna¬
tional Bill of Rights
305
Abortion rights
—
a shameful tale of re-interpretation
305
A masterly stratagem to insinuate abortion rights into hu¬
man rights law
306
Abortion
—
like FGM
—
always a harmful practice
308
An ideological approach
—
all reasons for abortion to
be respected?
309
Proclamation of Teheran
—
not an endorsement of abortion
311
Ideological attack on conscience rights
313
Extreme feminist ideology has led to a betrayal of universal
principles
314
Echoes of Nazi compliance by doctors in abortion programs
315
For radical feminists: pregnancy has become a metaphor for
disease
316
The ideologically unwanted
—
at risk of abortion
318
Aborting children s lives only to help their mothers?
319
Progressive corruption of medical ethics
320
Mass abortion
—
re-emergence of an ideology of stigmatiza-
tion and rejection
321
To delete non-derogable rights
—
an invalid action in human
rights law
322
Treaty monitoring bodies
—
turning breaches of the rule of
law into attempted recognition of a new law
323
Abortion rights
—
based on cultural pragmatism, not interna¬
tional human rights law
324
Abortion rights
—
contrary to the purposes and principles of
the United Nations
324
New Human Rights Council—already misconceptions on
abortion creeping in
325
Human Rights Council must reaffirm the deontological basis
of human rights law
326
Need for reform of the treaty monitoring bodies
326
When interpretation of a treaty provision is not in good faith
327
Bibliography
ЗЗ1
Index
339
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Joseph, Rita |
author_facet | Joseph, Rita |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Joseph, Rita |
author_variant | r j rj |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035699607 |
classification_rvk | PR 2213 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)633529646 (DE-599)GBV60056634X |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV035699607 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:43:43Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789004175600 |
language | English |
lccn | 2009021220 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-017753563 |
oclc_num | 633529646 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-11 |
owner_facet | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-11 |
physical | XVIII, 347 S. |
publishDate | 2009 |
publishDateSearch | 2009 |
publishDateSort | 2009 |
publisher | Nijhoff |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Joseph, Rita Verfasser aut Human rights and the unborn child by Rita Joseph Leiden [u.a.] Nijhoff 2009 XVIII, 347 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Unborn children (Law) Right to life Abortion / Law and legislation Human rights Menschenrecht Recht Digitalisierung UB Regensburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017753563&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Joseph, Rita Human rights and the unborn child Unborn children (Law) Right to life Abortion / Law and legislation Human rights Menschenrecht Recht |
title | Human rights and the unborn child |
title_auth | Human rights and the unborn child |
title_exact_search | Human rights and the unborn child |
title_full | Human rights and the unborn child by Rita Joseph |
title_fullStr | Human rights and the unborn child by Rita Joseph |
title_full_unstemmed | Human rights and the unborn child by Rita Joseph |
title_short | Human rights and the unborn child |
title_sort | human rights and the unborn child |
topic | Unborn children (Law) Right to life Abortion / Law and legislation Human rights Menschenrecht Recht |
topic_facet | Unborn children (Law) Right to life Abortion / Law and legislation Human rights Menschenrecht Recht |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017753563&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT josephrita humanrightsandtheunbornchild |