Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Helen Alvare on I. Glenn Cohen’s "Regulating Reproduction: The Problem with Best Interests"
Helen M. Alvare (George Mason University School of Law) has posted A Response to Professor I. Glenn Cohen's 'Regulating Reproduction: The Problem with Best Interests' on SSRN. Here is the abstract:
This response to Professor
I. Glenn Cohen’s article, Regulating Reproduction: The Problem with Best
Interests, argues that rules restricting whether, when, or with whom a person
reproduces serve an important societal purpose and need not be abandoned simply
because they cannot technically be supported by a “best interests of the
resulting child” (“BIRC”) rationale due to the “non-identity” problem. The
non-identity problem refers to the fact that such rules could result in a
particular child not being conceived at all, or in the creation of a different
child at another time. While Professor Cohen correctly notes that such rules
might be misunderstood to suggest that some human lives are “not worth living,”
this response proposes that it is possible – and necessary – to avoid that
unacceptable message, without at the same time accepting the extreme conclusion
that adults need never constrain their behaviors respecting conception. This
result can be achieved by re-conceiving the BIRC rationale as an effort to
remind parents – prior to the moment when parenting begins (conception) – of
what the law both needs and assumes them to be: fit parents who act in their
children’s best interests. The state should retain the ability to exhort adults
that a child’s future flourishing is influenced by the parents’ situation at
the moment of conception – e.g. the parents’ age, marital status, and any kin
relationship, among other factors – and reproductive regulation often serves
this important objective.
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/reproductive_rights/2012/09/helen-alvare-on-professor-i-glenn-cohens-regulating-reproduction-the-problem-with-best-interests.html