In August 2017, the first meeting of the 85th Legislative Council passed the rules posted on this website. The Texas State Constitution currently adopts amendments approved by voters in November 2017. In 2018, the chapter was entitled Constitution, and the informal part has modified the text of the Constitution to reflect modifications and to modernize the language.
Appeals of the state of Texas and its Georgia companion, Doe v. Bolton, Articles, p. 179. Constitutional challenge to domestic criminal abortion law. Texas state regulations attacked here are typical regulations that have been enforced in many countries for about a century. In contrast, Georgian law has legislative products that reflect modern actors, at least to some extent, recent changes in attitudes, reflect the influence of medical knowledge and technology, and a new way of thinking about old problems I will.
It is clear that Texas abortion rules directly infringe this right. In fact, it is hard to imagine a more complete constitutional freedom struggle than the strict penal code currently in force in Texas. The next question is whether improvement of national interest can prove that this abortion can survive "specially carefully considered" required by the 14 th revision. The insisted national interest is to protect the health and safety of pregnant women and to preserve the potential life in the future. These are sufficient to allow the country to regulate abortions such as other surgical procedures and are probably just legitimate goals enough to make the abortion of the middle pregnancy more rigorous.
Roe v. Wade was a groundbreaking legal decision issued on January 22, 1973 and the US Supreme Court dismissed the Texas state abortion prohibition and actually legalized the entire US program. The court judged that the right of privacy protected by Article 14 of the Constitutional amendment included the right of women's abortion. Roe v. Before Wade, abortion had been considered illegal in the majority of the country since the end of the 19th century. In 1965, the US Supreme Court dismissed the law prohibiting the distribution of birth control to married couples and judged that they infringed the implicit privacy rights of the US constitution. In 1972, the Supreme Court abolished the law prohibiting the distribution of contraceptives to unadministered adults.