Monday, June 2, 2008
Recommended Reading
[Click on the title to download/print the paper.]
"Judicial Modesty and Abortion"
South Carolina Law Review, 2008
TERESA STANTON COLLETT, University of St. Thomas School of Law
Email: [email protected]
During his confirmation hearings before the Judiciary Committee of the United
States Senate, then Judge John Roberts testified that he wanted to be a "modest"
judge. By this, he appears to have meant a judge who strives to interpret the
law as the lawmakers intended, and provides judicial answers only to the
questions necessary to resolve the case before the court. The purpose of this
article is to consider the implications of this conception of "judicial modesty"
for the constitutional jurisprudence of abortion.
The first section of
this article will consider whether the Constitution, by its terms, historical
understanding, or previous judicial interpretation, required the Court to
constitutionalize questions related to abortion. My conclusions compel me to
join the legions of legal scholars who have sharply criticized the reasoning
employed by the Court in Roe v. Wade. Section two of the article attempts to
determine whether the Court expanded or limited the impact of Roe's flawed
reasoning in its subsequent abortion cases until the time of Chief Justice
Robert's confirmation. The evidence largely supports the conclusion that the
Court expanded its flawed reasoning, reaching new heights of judicial hubris in
Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey and new lows in its
indifference to the evidentiary record in Stenberg v. Carhart. The third section
of this article then carefully examines Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of Northern
New England and Gonzales v. Carhart. These are the only two decisions on
abortion that have issued since Chief Justice Roberts assumed leadership of the
Supreme Court. These cases appear to foreshadow greater judicial restraint when
reviewing abortion-related legislation, and thus greater freedom for the people
and their elected representatives to decide the proper limits of the state's
interest in protecting women and the unborn life they carry within them. In the
final section, I briefly speculate about the impact of a judicially modest
approach in shaping future abortion jurisprudence. I predict fewer successful
facial challenges to abortion regulations; greater emphasis on the requirements
of constitutional and prudential standing; skepticism regarding claims of
third-party representation; and careful review of the evidentiary record offered
to support assertions that contested abortion regulations unduly burden women's
liberty when seeking abortions. Contrary to claims made in abortion activitists'
hysterical denunciations of Carhart II, the Court's decision upholding the
federal partial-birth abortion ban, I conclude that a judicially modest approach
is unlikely to result in the overruling of Roe v. Wade within the foreseeable
future.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2008/06/recommended-rea.html