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The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007
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Page 1: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion

Patti Lee

2007

Page 2: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Introduction• Landmark Supreme Court Cases

• Griswold v. Connecticut (1965)• Roe v. Wade (1973)• Webster v. Reproductive Health Services (1989)• Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992)

• Presidential Administrations on the issue• Reagan• Bush 41• Clinton• Bush 43

• Implications of a ban on abortion• Economic• Social

Page 3: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Landmark Supreme Court Cases• Griswold v. Connecticut (1965)• Roe v. Wade (1973)• Webster v. Reproductive Health Services (1989)• Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992)

Page 4: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Griswold v. Connecticut (1965)• Landmark case in privacy• 1961-National Council of

Churches of Christ • The Planned Parenthood

League of Connecticut• Fourteenth Amendment• “Case or controversy”• “an uncommonly silly law”

Page 5: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Roe v. Wade (1973)

• Norma L. McCorvey• Could not have abortion

under Texas law• Abortion deemed as a

fundamental right

Page 6: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Webster v. Reproductive Health Services (1989)

• Questionable preamble• No public hospital or public hospital worker was to

take part in an abortion nor were public hospitals allowed to expend funds on abortions

Page 7: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992)

• Urged Court to overturn Roe V. Wade (1973).• Missouri’s provisions

• Informed consent• Spousal notification• Parental consent• 24 hour waiting period• Imposition of reporting requirements

Page 8: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Presidential Administrations on the Issue

Page 9: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Reagan Administration• While governor of California, signed

the California Abortion Reform Act • Made over 300 appointments, most

all of them anti-abortion• Approved anti-abortion legislation• Sent personal messages to the

National Right to Life Committee as

well as ministers

Page 10: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

George H. W. Bush Administration• Supported a woman’s right to an

abortion as a Texas congressman• Changed position during the 1988

election to gain support of the Christian Right

• Pushed for denial of funding for abortions

Page 11: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Clinton Administration• lifted the gag rule on Title X fund

recipients • influenced Congress to alter the language

of the Hyde Amendment to include funding for “wrongful pregnancies” resulting from rape and incest

• allowed abortions on American military bases

• Two Supreme Court Justices appointed supported Roe

Page 12: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

George W. Bush Administration• Has supported ban of “partial-birth”

abortions• Reduced Access to family planning • Reinstates gag rule on international

family planning assistance• Funds abstinence-only education in

public schools• Packs the courts to overturn Roe

Page 13: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Economic Consequences

Page 14: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children

• Four eligibility requirements:• categorical

• residential

• Income

• nutrition risk

• Statistics• demographics of participants

• Annual cost

Page 15: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Social Consequences

Page 16: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Are Abortions affecting crime rates?• Pre-Legalized Abortion

• Little access or affordability• No optimal time for child-bearing

• Post-Legalization• Drastic drops in crime beginning in 1991• Healthier children born—both mentally and physically

• Other Theories• aging of the population • better policing strategies• heightened gun control laws• increased capital punishment

Page 17: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

The Justification is Simple• Unwanted children are at a greater risk for crime, and legalized abortion leads to a

reduction in the number of unwanted births.

• Legalized abortions in the United States can account for about half of the decline between 1991 and 1997.

Page 18: The Social and Economic Consequences of a Ban on Abortion Patti Lee 2007.

Further Reading

• Levitt, Steven D. and Dubner, Stephen J. (2005). Freakonomics

• Hull, N.E.H. and Peter Charles Hoffer. (2001). Roe v. Wade: The Abortion Rights Controversy in American History

• Goetz, Christopher and Christopher Foote. (2005). “Oops-onomics.” The Economist.