Irish Abortion Laws: A Cry For Change
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Abstract
Abortion and the laws related to it have always
been surrounded by debates, drawing arguments in support and against them from
various religious beliefs, ethics and morals. These debates have raised very significant,
yet complex legal questions such as whether a foetus is a living being does it have the
right of being carried in the womb till it is ready to be born, whether its right to life
supersedes that of its mother and whether the mother has the right to decide when to
give birth, among many others. Countries all over the world have different criterion for
alloiving or banning abortion. One of the several countries having almost chaotic
abortion laws is Ireland, which has in spite of various judgments of national and
supranational courts, failed to update and modify its laws and allow abortion even in
cases of rape or incest. This article embarks on an analysis of Irish abortion laws from
past to present through various landmark judgments. In the existing era of awareness
of individual rights and State obligations, the rights of the unborn child and the
mother need to be balanced. Constant efforts need to be made to prevent religious
beliefs from superseding the rationality of law in today's heterogeneous society.
Following this very principle, this Article highlights the ambiguous position of the Irish
abortion laws and the need to modify the same.
