From Silent Atrocities to Justice: Examining the Legal Landscape of Forced Sterilisation of Women with Disabilities across Europe
By Shivam Jadaun and Shivani,
JURISTnews
| 06. 27. 2024
Image by European Council from Flickr
In some European Union nations, the forced sterilisation of people with disabilities is still a widespread and concerning practice that blatantly violates their fundamental rights and human dignity. The scope of forced sterilisation in the EU was discovered through a study carried out by the European Disability Forum. At least 14 EU members still engage in the practice, with three of them Czechia, Hungary, and Portugal explicitly allowing it on children despite worldwide criticism and established legal frameworks which prohibits forced sterilisation such as United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which is ratified by the EU and all its Member States, and It is also forbidden under the Council of Europe Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence (‘Istanbul Convention’). Only nine EU nations forbid forcible sterilisation.
Moreover, The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (“UNCRPD”), lacks explicit mention of forced sterilisation in treaty text, but the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities has gone on to emphasise protection...
Related Articles
By Joy Zhang, Progress Educational Trust | 08.12.2024
What do China's new ethical guidlines tell us about the country's changing attitude to human genome editing? Professor Joy Zhang reads between the lines...
Recently, China's National Science and Technology Ethics Committee introduced a new set of ethics guidelines on...
By Alcott Wei, South China Morning Post | 07.13.2024
China has banned all clinical research involving germline genome editing under a newly released ethics guideline.
Germline gene engineering relates to altering the DNA in sperm, eggs or early embryos to introduce changes that can be inherited.
“Any clinical research...
By Staff, Japan Times | 07.10.2024
Photo by Roméo A. on Unsplash
How did Japanese society, which was supposed to have transformed into a democracy after World War II, justify discrimination against people with disabilities and openly endorse eugenics?
This is a key question people may...
By Rachel Clayton, ABC News | 07.08.2024
In her early 30s, Michelle Galea wasn't convinced motherhood was for her.
"I didn't know if I wanted a child or if society was telling me I should have a child right now," she said.
But as she watched two...