Stewardship challenges abortion: A proposed means to mitigate abortion's social divisiveness
- PMID: 26912934
- PMCID: PMC4536630
- DOI: 10.1179/2050854915Y.0000000006
Stewardship challenges abortion: A proposed means to mitigate abortion's social divisiveness
Abstract
Since 1973 the legislated constitutional right to abortion has produced a political dichotomy (anti-abortion versus pro-abortion) within the United States, even while witnessing a gradual decline in the rate of abortions. A third paradigm, moral stewardship, is advanced as an effective means to ameliorate this social divisiveness. Incorporating the concept of stewardship into deliberations of pregnancy termination would require recognition, through fact-based education programs, of the life circumstances that prompt the consideration to terminate a pregnancy. Based on collective responsibility, policies, and programs are needed to foster social justice for parents and for the offspring brought to term, without creating excessive burdens on women faced with an unwanted pregnancy. Moral stewardship is perceived as humanitarian to family and community and advantageous to society overall. It also offers a serious opportunity to reshape our society from divisiveness to inclusiveness, and to guide science policy judgment that enhances and strengthens social justice. Lay summary: Differing opinions over the ethics of human abortion have been legion since Roe v. Wade (1973). The disputes between pro- and anti-abortion factions have segregated society with few improvements in social justice. This study offers an alternative approach, one capable of social assimilation and justice for unwanted offspring and pregnant mothers bearing them. It promotes moral stewardship toward the unborn whose humanity and personhood are recognized genetically and supported philosophically by long-standing ethical principles. Stewardship incorporates all people at all levels of society based on collective responsibility, supported by government policies, yet not restricting a mother's choices for the future of her unborn offspring.
Keywords: Abortion; Anti-abortion; Autonomy; Beneficence; Collective responsibility; Fertility rates; Fetal rights; Humanness; Media role; Personhood; Policy considerations; Preborn; Social divisiveness; Social justice; Stewardship.
Similar articles
-
Fetal viability as a threshold to personhood. A legal analysis.J Leg Med. 1995 Dec;16(4):607-36. doi: 10.1080/01947649509510995. J Leg Med. 1995. PMID: 8568420 Review.
-
Roe v. Wade. Wayward women.Conscience. 1998 Winter;18(4):33-4. Conscience. 1998. PMID: 12178888
-
How technology is reframing the abortion debate.Hastings Cent Rep. 1986 Feb;16(1):33-42. Hastings Cent Rep. 1986. PMID: 3514547
-
Abortion: rights or technicalities? A comparison of Roe v. Wade with the abortion decision of the German Federal Constitutional Court.Hum Life Rev. 1975 Summer;1(3):60-74. Hum Life Rev. 1975. PMID: 11662181
-
Legal abortion: the impending obsolescence of the trimester framework.Am J Law Med. 1988;14(1):69-108. Am J Law Med. 1988. PMID: 3068986 Review.
References
-
- Abort73.com. 2013. Fact and figures relating to the frequency of abortion in the United States. http://Abortion73.com/abortion_facts/us_abortion_statistics/.
-
- Bajema C.E. 1974. Abortion and the meaning of personhood. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House.
-
- Beauchamp T.L., and Childress J.F.. 2009. Principles of biomedical ethics, 6th ed. New York: Oxford University Press.
-
- Beckwith F.J. 2011. Defending life: A moral and legal case against abortion choice. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
-
- Bhatnagar S.M. 2000. Essentials of human embryology, revised edition. Talangana, India: Orient Blackswan Ltd.
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources