Reproductive Rights: A New Era?

Vis a Vis podcast featuring Olatunde Johnson and Eleonora Bottini

Today, March 4th 2024, France becomes the first country in the world to enshrine the right to abortion in its Constitution. In the United States, by contrast, the Supreme Court overturned Roe v Wade in 2022, and ruled that the Constitution does not confer a right to abortion, sending legal and social aftershocks throughout the country. Today, 14 states in the US have near-total abortion bans with no exception for rape or incest; 12 other states have severe restrictions. This new landscape puts the United States at odds with trends in many Western countries, including France, where abortion became legal in 1975. What do these developments reveal about democratic trends in the United States and France? What can we learn from comparing the legal and political implications of this issue in these two countries? To answer these questions, we went back to a Vis A Vis conversation from June 2023, when Emmanuel Kattan, Director of Alliance, spoke to two constitutional experts, Olatunde Johnson and Eleonora Bottini, on the subject of abortion and its place in French and American constitutions.

Olatunde Johnson

Olatunde Johnson is the Ruth Bader Ginsburg ’59 Professor of Law at Columbia University. She teaches and writes about anti-discrimination law, congressional power, and courts. She is a recipient of several awards for her teaching and service at Columbia Law School.  Prior to entering academia, Professor Johnson clerked for Justice John Paul Stevens on the U.S. Supreme Court, served as constitutional and civil rights counsel to Senator Edward M. Kennedy on the Senate Judiciary Committee, and as a lawyer at the NAACP Legal Defense & Education Fund.

Eleonora Bottini

Eleonora Bottini is Full Professor of Public Law at the University of Caen-Normandy (France) and is currently the Martin-Flynn Global Law Professor at the University of Connecticut School of Law. She served previously as associate professor at Sorbonne Law School in Paris and was the Alliance Visiting Professor at Columbia University. She specializes in comparative constitutional law, French constitutional law and legal theory. She has published several articles and book chapters in French, Italian and English and she is the author of a book based on her PhD thesis, “Constitutional sanction: study of a doctrinal argument” (Dalloz, 2016, in French), on the theoretical origins of judicial review.

MORE CAHIERS

Music Education Under Siege
A 1991 Project Initiative
JANUARY 10, 2025
The Sixties Explosion
Library Chat: Edgar Broughton and Mark Mazower + Concert
DECEMBER 19, 2024
Tropical Narratives
Library Chat: Debashree Mukherjee and Keithley Woolward
NOVEMBER 25, 2024
On the Power of Cultural Exchanges
Jennifer Kessler
NOVEMBER 14, 2024
Sustainable Deconstruction
Modeling Sustainable Deconstructions with the Raw Earth Sgraffito Pavilion
SEPTEMBER 12, 2024
Trees, Branches, Patterns: Arboreal Physics, Material Poetics
Library Chat: Patricia Dailey and Vincent Fleury
AUGUST 23, 2024
The Length and Breadth of Sustainability: Buildings, History, Culture, and Education
Library Chat: Radhika Iyengar and Mohamed Elshahed
JULY 29, 2024
Delphine Taylor and Nellie Hermann: Narrative Medicine
Atelier
JULY 25, 2024
Pre-Modernists Reading Proust
Library Chat: Hannah Weaver and Emma Claussen
JULY 14, 2024
Material Curiosity
Library Chat: Ana María Gómez López and Dorothea von Mücke
JUNE 28, 2024
We use cookies to enhance your experience of visiting this website. Find out more.
REJECT