Law is an instrument that may be used by
the state, by the health care professions or by individual citizens to
advance policies for reproductive health. Policy must, of course, be clear
before the use of law can be determined.
Reproductive health policy must resolve the challenge of
ordering priorities. Reproductive health goals and values must be pursued
on the basis of a realistic assessment of how the laws that are used to
pursue them will operate in practice. For instance, there have been cases
where laws drawn up to protect would-be spouses against their partner's
HIV infection failed because people found ways to avoid the laws.
Specifically, authorities in a number of places have tried to make the
issuing of marriage licences conditional on the exchange of HIV test
results by those intending to marry. The effect in many cases was that
couples went elsewhere to marry, or lived together and started families
without getting married. Further, the law had no impact on couples of the
same sex who moved in together since they were precluded from marriage.
As policy on reproductive health is drawn up on the basis
of values and priorities, it must balance advantages against
disadvantages. For instance, some policies give priority to the value of
unborn human life over the value of women's choice; other policies,
however, conclude that the costs of this in terms of the failure to
recognize women as responsible decision-makers and of maternal mortality
resulting from illicit abortion is too high. This illustrates a challenge
that reproductive health policy must resolve—that of balancing high but
abstract principles against inadvertent harmful consequences such as
avoidable death.
Modern law-making generally follows two models. The first
is based on principles of virtue to which those governed by law are
expected to conform in order for society to achieve moral goals. The
second is pragmatic, based on experiences and practices that individuals
are empowered or required to follow and that are believed likely to
produce desired results. Activities relevant to reproductive health have
historically in many places been regulated by moral or principle-based
law, often linked with religious beliefs. To shift to a more secular
concept of reproductive health, implementing pragmatic rules that
associate the validity of laws with their practical consequences, may be
difficult.
Each country's laws fit in with its traditions of legal
development. Some countries embody their law in comprehensive codes that
contain all of the rights that may be claimed, others set their law in a
framework of custom that judges declare, and yet others fit enacted law
into a framework of sacred law interpreted by religious authorities.
Where all legal claims to rights are codified, a section
of the code may be devoted to reproductive health. For instance, the
Russian Federation was considering the enactment of a comprehensive law
that expresses the reproductive rights of citizens. In contrast, many
countries have laws limited to advancing a particular goal in reproductive
health care, as in the case of Ghana which in 1994 enacted a law
prohibiting female genital mutilation. Several countries that are
developing new constitutions have included provisions for the protection
of reproductive rights. For example, Article of the 1991 Constitution of
Colombia protects the right to decide on the number and spacing of one's
children. Other constitutions have more general provisions, such as on the
rights to liberty and security of the person, that have been applied to
protect reproductive rights. In this regard, Canada in 1982 adopted a
Charter of Rights and Freedoms that included this right in general terms.
In 1988, Canada's Supreme Court found that the provisions of the criminal
code that limited women's choice of abortion violated this right and were
unconstitutional and therefore inoperative.