Conscientious Objection and the Provision of Abortion at Late(r) Stages of Pregnancy

This essay concerns a theoretical issue that has the potential to arise in the provision of late(r) term abortion in particularly liberal or highly permissive jurisdictions, meaning those that do not require criteria to be met if the procedure is to be lawful. By not establishing criteria that rest...

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Main Author: Nathan Emmerich
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Programmes de bioéthique, École de santé publique de l'Université de Montréal 2025-07-01
Series:Canadian Journal of Bioethics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cjb-rcb.ca/index.php/cjb-rcb/article/view/780
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author Nathan Emmerich
author_facet Nathan Emmerich
author_sort Nathan Emmerich
collection DOAJ
description This essay concerns a theoretical issue that has the potential to arise in the provision of late(r) term abortion in particularly liberal or highly permissive jurisdictions, meaning those that do not require criteria to be met if the procedure is to be lawful. By not establishing criteria that restrict the provision of late(r) term abortion the procedure is rendered lawful “on demand”, at least in principle. This raises the possibility that healthcare professionals may encounter specific requests for terminations that they consider morally unjustified, meaning that some might seek to “opt-out” of provision in such cases by appealing to the notion of conscientious objection. The existing literature would likely frame such appeals to be instances of selective conscientious objection. Whilst I argue that this notion is flawed, I also suggest that there is a need to recognise a degree of nuance in the ethical positions held by healthcare professionals when it comes to the provision of abortion at late(r) gestational (st)ages in jurisdictions that adopt highly permissive forms of regulation. However, given that conscientious objection should not be permitted to obstruct provision of legally permitted interventions, there is a moral imperative to ensure access, and healthcare systems must take steps to ensure provision. Whilst it may be possible, it is unlikely to be simple, and it may auger against establishing legalisation that is highly permissive.
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spelling doaj-art-72be3e1584f3492c8aa9d2a89f1c63f12025-07-30T17:26:32ZengProgrammes de bioéthique, École de santé publique de l'Université de MontréalCanadian Journal of Bioethics2561-46652025-07-018310.7202/1118898arConscientious Objection and the Provision of Abortion at Late(r) Stages of PregnancyNathan Emmerich0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8199-4673School of Medicine and Psychology, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia This essay concerns a theoretical issue that has the potential to arise in the provision of late(r) term abortion in particularly liberal or highly permissive jurisdictions, meaning those that do not require criteria to be met if the procedure is to be lawful. By not establishing criteria that restrict the provision of late(r) term abortion the procedure is rendered lawful “on demand”, at least in principle. This raises the possibility that healthcare professionals may encounter specific requests for terminations that they consider morally unjustified, meaning that some might seek to “opt-out” of provision in such cases by appealing to the notion of conscientious objection. The existing literature would likely frame such appeals to be instances of selective conscientious objection. Whilst I argue that this notion is flawed, I also suggest that there is a need to recognise a degree of nuance in the ethical positions held by healthcare professionals when it comes to the provision of abortion at late(r) gestational (st)ages in jurisdictions that adopt highly permissive forms of regulation. However, given that conscientious objection should not be permitted to obstruct provision of legally permitted interventions, there is a moral imperative to ensure access, and healthcare systems must take steps to ensure provision. Whilst it may be possible, it is unlikely to be simple, and it may auger against establishing legalisation that is highly permissive. https://cjb-rcb.ca/index.php/cjb-rcb/article/view/780abortionlate term abortionservice provisioninstitutional conscientious objectionconscientious refusal
spellingShingle Nathan Emmerich
Conscientious Objection and the Provision of Abortion at Late(r) Stages of Pregnancy
Canadian Journal of Bioethics
abortion
late term abortion
service provision
institutional conscientious objection
conscientious refusal
title Conscientious Objection and the Provision of Abortion at Late(r) Stages of Pregnancy
title_full Conscientious Objection and the Provision of Abortion at Late(r) Stages of Pregnancy
title_fullStr Conscientious Objection and the Provision of Abortion at Late(r) Stages of Pregnancy
title_full_unstemmed Conscientious Objection and the Provision of Abortion at Late(r) Stages of Pregnancy
title_short Conscientious Objection and the Provision of Abortion at Late(r) Stages of Pregnancy
title_sort conscientious objection and the provision of abortion at late r stages of pregnancy
topic abortion
late term abortion
service provision
institutional conscientious objection
conscientious refusal
url https://cjb-rcb.ca/index.php/cjb-rcb/article/view/780
work_keys_str_mv AT nathanemmerich conscientiousobjectionandtheprovisionofabortionatlaterstagesofpregnancy