Pizzarossa Lucía Berro, Perehudoff Katrina
Doctoral candidate at the International Law Department and Global Health Law Groningen Research Centre at the University of Groningen, Groningen, the Netherlands and a legal advisor for MYSU (Women & Health) in Uruguay. She co-founded the Health & Gender Policy Hub.
Doctoral candidate in the Global Health Unit, Department of Health Sciences in the University Medical Centre, University of Groningen, the Netherlands, and research fellow at the Global Health Law Groningen Research Centre. She co-founded the Health & Gender Policy Hub.
Health Hum Rights. 2017 Dec;19(2):279-293.
General Comment No. 22, issued in 2016 by the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), clarifies states' legal duties to respect, protect, and fulfill the right to sexual and reproductive health (SRH). Our study analyzes domestic constitutions around the world to investigate whether and to what extent the right to sexual and reproductive health is respected, protected, and fulfilled; to what extent these provisions are inclusive and non-discriminatory; and to what degree the interlinkages between this and other human rights are acknowledged. Of the 195 constitutions accessed, 27 enshrine sexual and/or reproductive health, and seven adopt restrictive approaches to this right. In the 27 constitutions, provisions most frequently enshrine respect of one's sexual health and family planning decisions, the protection of sexual health, and the provision of reproductive health care and family planning services (fulfillment). Most of the 27 constitutions fail to adequately respect reproductive health rights; to protect reproductive health, family planning, and abortion services from third-party interference; and to fulfill all dimensions of sexual health and access to abortion. Three of the 27 constitutions enshrine a universal right to SRH, and additional constitutions protect specific vulnerable groups (such as women, children) and/or restrict the scope of rights holders to couples. Among the 27 constitutions, nine explicitly link the right to sexual and reproductive health to the rights to education, science, and/or to make autonomous decisions about sexuality and reproduction. Our results can serve as a baseline measure to track constitutional reforms in pursuit of the realization of sexual and reproductive health and rights, and as building blocks for future lawmakers committed to realizing these rights through domestic legal reform.
经济、社会及文化权利委员会(CESCR)于2016年发布的第22号一般性意见,阐明了各国在尊重、保护和实现性健康和生殖健康(SRH)权利方面的法律义务。我们的研究分析了世界各国的国内宪法,以调查性健康和生殖健康权利是否以及在多大程度上得到尊重、保护和实现;这些条款在多大程度上具有包容性且不歧视;以及在何种程度上承认这一权利与其他人权之间的相互联系。在获取的195部宪法中,有27部载入了性健康和/或生殖健康相关内容,7部对这一权利采取了限制措施。在这27部宪法中,条款最常规定尊重个人的性健康和计划生育决定、保护性健康以及提供生殖保健和计划生育服务(实现)。这27部宪法中的大多数未能充分尊重生殖健康权利;保护生殖健康、计划生育和堕胎服务免受第三方干涉;以及实现性健康的所有方面并提供堕胎服务。这27部宪法中有3部载入了性健康和生殖健康的普遍权利,另有一些宪法保护特定弱势群体(如妇女、儿童)和/或将权利主体范围限制为夫妻。在这27部宪法中,有9部明确将性健康和生殖健康权利与教育、科学权利和/或就性和生殖自主做决定的权利联系起来。我们的研究结果可作为一项基线衡量标准,用于跟踪旨在实现性健康和生殖健康及权利的宪法改革,也可作为未来致力于通过国内法律改革实现这些权利的立法者的基石。