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"After-Birth Abortion: Why Should the Baby Live?" [1] is a controversial article published by Francesca Minerva and Alberto Giubilini. Available online from 2012 and published in the Journal of Medical Ethics in 2013, [2] it argues to call child euthanasia or infanticide "after-birth abortion" and highlights similarities between abortion and euthanasia.
The Born-Alive Abortion Survivors Protection Act is a proposed United States law that would penalize healthcare practitioners who fail to provide care for an infant that is born-alive from an abortion attempt. [1] It was introduced in the 114th, 115th, 116th, 117th, 118th, and 119th Congresses.
The Born-Alive Infants Protection Act (BAIPA) was enacted August 5, 2002, by an Act of Congress and signed into law by George W. Bush. It asserts the human rights of infants born after a failed attempt to induce abortion. A "born-alive infant" is specified as a "person, human being, child, individual".
The Born-Alive Infants Protection Act of 2002 established that federal legal protections cover children born after an abortion.
Minnesota Department of Health documents show that eight infants were born alive during abortion procedures between 2019 and 2022, and, in 2023, Walz signed legislation that repealed most of a ...
40 Days for Life, an anti-abortion activist group, named for the pattern of several biblical events lasting 40 days. [4] Abolitionists Rising (formerly Free The States), a national, Protestant anti-abortion organization based in Oklahoma that advocates for the total abolition of abortion. [5]
When most people think about abortion, they don’t think of people like me, who desperately wanted to be pregnant, Emily Savors writes. An abortion saved my life and made the family I have now ...
As long as the fetus was conceived before the testator's death (usually, the father) and then born alive, their inheritance rights were equal to those born before the testator's death. [15] Even though under Roman law the fetus was not a legal subject, it was a potential person whose property rights were protected after birth. [ 15 ]