Description While the Indian legislation on prenatal tests, the Pre-natal Diagnostic Techniques Act, 1994, prohibits the use of prenatal tests for sex-selection, it permits the use of these tests to pick out foetuses with disabilities. Further, the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971 permits the termination of such lives. The author questions the breach of rights of persons with disabilities by studying the contradiction that exists between disability-selective abortion and disability rights. Analysing the legitimacy of an automatic decision to abort a foetus with disability, this book questions the unproblematic perception towards disability-selective abortions, but without entering the realm of a woman's right to take decisions about her body. While the Indian legislation on prenatal tests, the Pre-natal Diagnostic Techniques Act, 1994, prohibits the use of prenatal tests for sex-selection, it permits the use of these tests to pick out foetuses with disabilities. Further, the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971 permits the termination of such lives. The author questions the breach of rights of persons with disabilities by studying the contradiction that exists between disability-selective abortion and disability rights. Analysing the legitimacy of an automatic decision to abort a foetus with disability, this book questions the unproblematic perception towards disability-selective abortions, but without entering the realm of a woman's right to take decisions about her body. While the Indian legislation on prenatal tests, the Pre-natal Diagnostic Techniques Act, 1994, prohibits the use of prenatal tests for sex-selection, it permits the use of these tests to pick out foetuses with disabilities. Further, the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971 permits the termination of such lives. The author questions the breach of rights of persons with disabilities by studying the contradiction that exists between disability-selective abortion and disability rights. Analysing the legitimacy of an automatic decision to abort a foetus with disability, this book questions the unproblematic perception towards disability-selective abortions, but without entering the realm of a woman's right to take decisions about her body. Title Pages Source: The Contradiction in Disability Law Publisher: Oxford University Press (p.i) The Contradiction in Disability Law (p.ii) (p.iii) The Contradiction in Disability Law (p.iv) Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide. Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries. Published in India by Oxford University Press YMCA Library Building, 1 Jai Singh Road, New Delhi 110 001, India © Smitha Nizar 2016 The moral rights of the author have been asserted. First Edition published in 2016 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of Oxford University Press, or as expressly permitted by law, by licence, or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organization. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside the scope of the above should be sent to the Rights Department, Oxford University Press, at the address above. You must not circulate this work in any other form and you must impose this same condition on any acquirer. ISBN-13: 978-0-19-946665-8 ISBN-10: 0-19-946665-3 Typeset in Minion Pro 10.5/13 by Tranistics Data Technologies, Kolkata 700 091 Printed in India at Rakmo Press, New Delhi 110 020 Table of Contents Preface Acknowledgements List of Abbreviations and Acronyms List of Statutes Table of Treaties Table of Cases Introduction 1. The Interplay between Natural and Social Selection 2. Competing Discourses on Value and Quality of Human Life 3. Varied Perspectives on Sex- and Disability-selective Abortions 4. Perfection at the Cost of Excellence: Implications of Disability-selective Abortions 5. The Equality-Non-discrimination Gaze on the Right to Life 6. Disability-selective Abortions in National and International Law 7. Deliberated Decisions, Not Automated Response: The New Discourse on Disability- selective Abortions Bibliography Index (p.vii) Preface Source: The Contradiction in Disability Law Author(s): Smitha Nizar Publisher: Oxford University Press When I conceived my first baby, I was, like any other woman, all excited and enjoyed the emotional feelings absolutely exclusive to a woman. Even though I was eager to know the sex of my first baby, just to purchase gifts, it was legally prohibited in India. However, I felt proud of the powerful law that has banned scientific tests, to disable sex-selective abortions. But the very same law generously allowed tests that could tell if my baby would fall under the normal category, to make me eligible to give birth. Every test verified that the baby was perfectly alright and would not cause any harm or risk to my life. It was a pleasure to know that my baby was normal. I was grateful to science and the law for letting me know about my babies in advance. I was happy to have two girls and I challenged the Indian law that prohibits prenatal tests to know the sex of the baby. Had the Pre-natal Diagnostic Techniques (Regulation and Prevention of Misuse) Act (PNDT), 1994 permitted me to know the sex of my children in advance, I would have been happier to welcome them with many cute gifts. However, as a law student, I saluted the PNDT Act, a powerful and passionate law, that supports the birth of girl children by regulating and restraining science and it inspired me to pursue a research. The absolute legal ban on sex-selective abortions made the society acknowledge the wrongfulness of such practices that deny (p.viii) the right of existence, in effect denying right to equality and non-discrimination to one kind of humans, that is, the females. Thus, I started discussing the PNDT Act on all legal podiums, and won a gold medal for my post-graduation in law. However, the decision of an American woman of Indian origin to give birth to her first baby who had congenital disabilities prompted me to examine the murky side of my favourite PNDT law. I was not even aware of the exact conditions of congenital disabilities, but as a first-time mother I thought that women were not supposed to give birth to such babies. The law that prohibits prenatal diagnoses to know the sex permits it to know the disability. And it treats providing information about disabilities as unproblematic, even though that information facilitates selective abortion. The woman was determined to give birth to her first baby, ignoring the strong advice given by doctors to abort the foetus. In contrast to the medical assessment of abnormality, the child thus born is now a popular public speaker, of course still with all those abnormalities. This prompted me to review the PNDT Act, which prohibits the use of technology for sex selection but permits selecting out foetuses for many other conditions referred as abnormal. I curiously studied each of those conditions as stipulated under the act. The first condition was Down syndrome. I quickly connected it to Ikru, one of my childhood friends. He used to run out of his house, exactly at the time of my school bus, to give me a lovely smile. He would accept all the gifts from me, but he was a genius not to accept it from my other friends who used to befriend him to compete with me! This realization of individuality of persons with disabilities has inspired me to question the law in prohibiting sex identification but permitting identification of any other condition. The legal order on disability-selective abortion provided under the domestic laws—the PNDT Act, 1994 and the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971—thus present a paradox. It provides a sophisticated medico-legal strategy to abort foetuses with disabilities. Thus, five years of my life have been passionately spent on writing this book to demonstrate and address how the unproblematic disability-selective abortions are actually problematic. (p.ix) In the beginning, this legal research was to find out the fault in the law to challenge it. But, as if destined, during my research, I met with an accident resulting in severe head injury and short-term loss of memory (amnesia). Also, my friendship with persons with disabilities, especially my best friend Anna Clements, Michigan, USA, kept me on track with individuality and rights of persons with disabilities. How could I justify this book without experiencing disability in some form was the most inspired and whole-hearted consolation that I had during my short-term memory loss. The extant literature on disability rights and selective abortion does not intertwine the rights and persons with disabilities while this book entwines both. This work also identifies the power of legal discourse to construct and to normalize or legitimize world views, which is of crucial importance for persons with disabilities. That is why this book analyses two main themes: the medical view of disability and the role of law that is gaining social acceptance for this prejudiced view of disability. The law plays an unjust and unethical role when it simply prohibits and allows abortions based on the grounds of sex and disability respectively. This book analyses the legal developments on domestic and international levels. It examines whether the availability of disability-selective abortion negates the rights of persons with disabilities. Can the scientific and technological advances in the area of prenatal testing be carried forward without breaching disability rights? (p.x) (p.xi) Acknowledgements Source: The Contradiction in Disability Law Author(s): Smitha Nizar Publisher: Oxford University Press ‘All praise is due to God Almighty alone, the Sustainer of all the worlds.’ It was my first expression of acknowledgement when I completed this work. This book has been a work in progress for the last few years. Human life is so uncertain in this fast-moving new era. At the beginning of this work, this was just one of my philosophical tasks. However, I was destined to experience it myself, when I met with an accident. A severe head injury and the consequent memory loss made me realize the reality of this life. Anyone may lose the proud feeling of completeness at any point of their life. This realization is the spirit of this work. Let me remember all the personalities I met during this journey. I remember, with gratitude, the intellectual and emotional debts I have incurred in the completion of this work. In this connection, I would like to pay my tributes to Adrienne Asch, who offered me inspiration through her philosophical arguments and writings. Though we never met in person, I felt her absence when I got to know about her demise. Her writings are the most inspiring and encouraging part of my research. I have incurred uncountable and invaluable intellectual support from many. I would like to express my gratitude to my mentor and supervisor, Amita Dhanda, for the intellectual and emotional debts. She (p.xii) made me believe that all of us are end in ourselves, not the means of others. Her continuous counter-arguments and criticisms sharpened and shaped this work. I thank Anna Clements, the nicest person I have met in this life. Her continuous criticism and suggestions from her own experiences of disability helped me gain a new insight on disability perspective. I also thank Pat Ingoldsby for surprising me with the gift of a signed copy of his own wonderful book of poetry, ‘How was it for you Doctor?’ I cannot forget the support and inspiration I have gathered from Nilesh Singit, a true disability rights activist. I thank Arlene Kanter for her appreciation and acknowledgement of the difficulty to pursue this work. She continued her support when she invited me to Syracuse University to share my ideas. I also thank Tom Shakespeare, for sending me his personal copies of research articles and research papers. I am indebted to Renu Addlakha for her intellectual support and sharing her individual research papers and many other research works relevant to my work. I thank everyone in the working group of drafting Disability Rights Bill. It was a privilege to know how difficult, but meaningful, it is to draft a law and ensure the participation of its stakeholders. But, the present Disability Bill, diluted by the executive, demonstrates how hard it is for persons with disabilities to avail their rights without negotiating. I also acknowledge my students, friends, and well-wishers who shared my passion for this work, and also registered their criticism that forced me to move on. I owe a particular debt of gratitude to the multitude of scholars who have travelled before me in investigating the various contexts related to my research. I have acknowledged them in the footnotes and bibliography in this volume. I thank Indian Journal of Medical Ethics and Christ University Law Journal for granting permission to print the revised versions of my articles in this volume. I would also like to acknowledge the value of presence and emotional support of some persons in my life. To them, ‘thank you’ as the formal words will just be meaningless. K.P. Mansur is the one who never let me give up on this philosophical task. Many times, his demanding support made me to emulate high values. This work would not have been possible without his complete emotional support. (p.xiii) Thanks to my brother Jaffar for beng with me (as if he had a choice!). Finalization of this work would not have been possible without his technical efforts and emotional support. His comfort level with computers made sure no draft of this work was ever lost. He was the sole bearer of my eternal research troubles. My thanks to Khalid C.H. for his complete support. I also acknowledge all my teachers who will always be my inspiration to see life as a learning process. I appreciate all the great personalities who accept persons with disabilities as complete human beings and fight to protect their rights. I remember with gratitude all persons with disabilities. My friends, I conclude my lines of gratitude by taking a line of Pat Ingoldsby from his poem ‘Lovely Lost and Lonely’: ‘The world is a poorer place while you remain outside it!’ (p.xiv) (p.xv) Abbreviations and Acronyms Source: The Contradiction in Disability Law Publisher: Oxford University Press AIR All India Reporter ALR Australian Law Reports CEDAW Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women CEHAT Centre for Enquiry into Health and Allied Themes CRC Convention on the Rights of the Child DSPD Declaration on Social Progress and Development EFM Electronic Foetal Monitoring ICCPR International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights ICESCR International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights IDC International Disability Caucus ILO International Labour Organization IOR India Office Records MASUM Mahila Sarvangeen Utkarsh Mandal MTP Medical Termination of Pregnancy NAI National Archives of India NSWSC New South Wales Supreme Court Reporter NWP North Western Provinces PIL Public Interest Litigation PNDT Pre-natal Diagnosis Techniques (Regulation and Prevention of Misuse) (p.xvi) QB Queen’s Bench SC Supreme Court SCALE Supreme Court Almanac UDHR Universal Declaration of Human Rights UN United Nations UNCRPD United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities WFD World Federation of the Deaf WHO World Health Organization WNUSP World Network of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry (p.xvii) List of Statutes Source: The Contradiction in Disability Law Publisher: Oxford University Press Indian Penal Code, 1860 Act for the Prevention of the Murder of Female Infants (Female Infanticide Act), 1870 Act for the Suppression of Trade in, and Circulation of, Obscene Literature and Articles of Immoral Use, 1873 Constitution of India, 1950 Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971 National Genetic Diseases Act, 1976 Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (Regulation and Prevention of Misuse) Act, 1994 Sexual and Reproductive Health Act of Spain, 2010 (p.xviii) (p.xix) Table of Treaties Source: The Contradiction in Disability Law Publisher: Oxford University Press Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, 1979
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