微博

ECO中文网

 找回密码
 立即注册

QQ登录

只需一步,快速开始

查看: 5474|回复: 0
打印 上一主题 下一主题
收起左侧

2021.11.01堕胎限制将促使许多美国妇女跨越州界

[复制链接]
跳转到指定楼层
1
发表于 2022-5-4 02:06:31 | 只看该作者 回帖奖励 |倒序浏览 |阅读模式

马上注册 与译者交流

您需要 登录 才可以下载或查看,没有帐号?立即注册

x
Daily chart
Abortion restrictions will push many American women across state lines
If Roe v Wade is overturned, at least 21 states could ban all or nearly all abortions
Nov 1st 2021
Give this article

Editor’s note: On May 2nd a leaked draft opinion from the Supreme Court revealed that a majority of its justices would currently vote to overturn Roe v Wade. The next day the court said that the memo, although authentic, did not represent the final position of any member.

Sam dickman, a doctor who performs abortions in Texas, says his job these days has morphed into that of a “dystopian travel agent”. Since his state imposed a near-total ban on the procedure in September, he has advised over 100 women about how to get one in other states. Many Texan women have sought care in neighbouring Louisiana or Oklahoma, or even further afield. Planned Parenthood’s clinic in Denver, Colorado, treated 31 Texan women in September, up from five in August. Some drove for 16 hours one way to get an abortion, says Kristina Tocce, the organisation’s regional medical director.

On November 1st the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in legal challenges to Texas’s ban, which, at about six weeks, is the most restrictive in America. The arguments will address procedural questions related to the ban’s enforcement mechanism—such as whether private citizens may sue those who assist in the provision of an abortion. A month later the court will consider a separate law in Mississippi that prohibits terminations after 15 weeks of pregnancy. The state of Mississippi has asked the court to overturn or weaken Roe v Wade, its precedent from 1973 that legalised abortions until around 22 weeks.


Should that happen, conservative states hostile to abortion will probably make it harder to get one, compelling women to travel to more permissive places—much as Texan women are now doing. The Guttmacher Institute, a pro-choice think-tank, modelled the distance women would have to drive under three such hypothetical scenarios: if anti-abortion states banned the procedure totally (or nearly totally, such as a six-week ban similar to Texas’s law), if they banned them after 15 weeks (less than 8% of abortions happen after this point) and if they banned them after 20 weeks.

The institute classes 26 states as anti-abortion. Of those 21 have total or near-total bans that will kick in automatically or by quick state action if Roe is overturned. The other five have recently enacted new restrictions of various sorts and are home to voters whose political leanings suggest the legislature would probably impose more. Just over 303,000 abortions were performed in those states in 2017, 35% of the total nationwide.

The analysis finds that women in anti-abortion states would for the most part have to travel hundreds of miles farther to find an abortion clinic than they currently do. The distances would be greatest for women in clusters of restrictive states in the South, the Midwest and the Plains. More liberal states, such as Illinois and California, would see an influx of abortion-seekers, many of them arriving at a later stage in their pregnancies.

Take Louisiana, from which women would face the farthest journey in the hypothetical scenarios. The state has three abortion clinics. On average, a woman in Louisiana now has to drive 37 miles (60km) each way for a termination (and she must make the journey twice: once for state-mandated counselling, and again for the procedure, more than 24 hours later). If Louisiana and its similarly restrictive neighbours were to enact a ban on abortion, a woman there would have to travel 666 miles, to Illinois, Kansas or North Carolina.

Such trips are costly and time-consuming. Women need to arrange transport, time off work and child care if they already have children—plus pay for the actual abortion. For many those burdens could become insurmountable. ■



每日图表
堕胎限制将促使许多美国妇女跨越州界
如果罗伊诉韦德案被推翻,至少有21个州可能禁止所有或几乎所有的堕胎。
2021年11月1日



编者按:5月2日,最高法院泄露的一份意见书草案显示,其大多数法官目前将投票推翻罗伊诉韦德案。第二天,法院表示,该备忘录虽然真实,但并不代表任何成员的最终立场。

萨姆-迪克曼(Sam dickman)是一名在德克萨斯州进行堕胎手术的医生,他说他这些天的工作已经演变成了 "乌托邦式的旅行社"。自从他所在的州在9月几乎完全禁止堕胎以来,他已经向100多名妇女建议如何在其他州进行堕胎。许多德克萨斯州的妇女在邻近的路易斯安那州或俄克拉荷马州,甚至更远的地方寻求治疗。科罗拉多州丹佛市的计划生育诊所在9月份治疗了31名德克萨斯妇女,比8月份的5名有所增加。该组织的区域医疗主管克里斯蒂娜-托切说,有些人单程开车16小时来做堕胎。

11月1日,最高法院将听取对德克萨斯州禁令的法律挑战的口头辩论,该禁令约为6周,是美国最严格的禁令。这些辩论将涉及与该禁令的执行机制有关的程序性问题--例如,公民是否可以起诉那些协助提供堕胎服务的人。一个月后,法院将审议密西西比州的一项单独法律,该法律禁止在怀孕15周后终止妊娠。密西西比州要求法院推翻或削弱罗伊诉韦德案,该案是1973年的先例,该案将堕胎合法化至22周左右。


如果发生这种情况,敌视堕胎的保守州可能会使堕胎变得更加困难,迫使妇女前往更加宽松的地方--就像德克萨斯州妇女现在所做的那样。古特马赫研究所(Guttmacher Institute)是一个支持选择的智囊团,它模拟了在三种假设情况下妇女必须驾驶的距离:如果反堕胎州完全禁止堕胎(或几乎完全禁止,如类似于德克萨斯州法律的六周禁令),如果他们在15周后禁止堕胎(只有不到8%的堕胎发生在这一点上),如果他们在20周后禁止。

该研究所将26个州列为反堕胎州。其中21个州有全面或接近全面的禁令,如果罗伊被推翻,这些禁令将自动或通过州政府的快速行动启动。其他5个州最近颁布了各种新的限制措施,这些州的选民的政治倾向表明立法机构可能会施加更多限制。2017年,这些州的堕胎数量刚刚超过30.3万例,占全国总数的35%。

分析发现,反堕胎州的妇女在大多数情况下将不得不比现在走得更远,以找到一个堕胎诊所。在南方、中西部和平原地区的限制性州群中,妇女的距离将是最大的。较为自由的州,如伊利诺伊州和加利福尼亚州,将看到寻求堕胎者的涌入,其中许多人是在怀孕后期到达的。

以路易斯安那州为例,在假设的情况下,妇女将面临最远的旅程。该州有三个堕胎诊所。平均而言,路易斯安那州的一名妇女现在不得不单程开车37英里(60公里)去终止妊娠(她必须走两次:一次是国家规定的咨询,另一次是24小时后的手术)。如果路易斯安那州及其类似的限制性邻国颁布了堕胎禁令,那么那里的妇女将不得不旅行666英里,前往伊利诺伊州、堪萨斯州或北卡罗来纳州。

这样的旅行既费钱又费时。妇女需要安排交通、请假和照顾孩子(如果她们已经有了孩子),还要支付实际的堕胎费用。对许多人来说,这些负担可能会变得不可逾越。■
分享到:  QQ好友和群QQ好友和群 QQ空间QQ空间 腾讯微博腾讯微博 腾讯朋友腾讯朋友
收藏收藏 分享分享 分享淘帖 顶 踩
您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 立即注册

本版积分规则

QQ|小黑屋|手机版|网站地图|关于我们|ECO中文网 ( 京ICP备06039041号  

GMT+8, 2024-11-5 12:14 , Processed in 0.082148 second(s), 19 queries .

Powered by Discuz! X3.3

© 2001-2017 Comsenz Inc.

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表