In its report, the Commission for Reproductive Self-Determination and Reproductive Medicine appointed by the Federal Government recommends a comprehensive redesign of Section 218 of the German Criminal Code and advocates a three-stage model.
Advocates of a liberalization of the current legal situation call for the abolition of mandatory counselling in pregnancy conflicts, as they see this as a restriction of a woman's self-determination.
However, compulsory counseling offers a protected space and therefore also support and guidance in this difficult decision. In particular, it reaches women who are often under pressure within their social environment and would not voluntarily seek counseling without an obligation.
The current regulation ensures that the ethical, legal and psychosocial dimensions of abortion are taken into account.
The current legislation, based on the fundamental rulings of the Federal Constitutional Court in 1975 and 1993, protects both the woman's right to self-determination and the right of the unborn child. This compromise solution has proven its worth and is an expression of democratic values
Please note, to date the paper is only available in German.
Topics
About this series
The Monitor series deals with one main topic at a time from the perspective of KAS experts and places it in the political and social context on the basis of a few key points.
Ordering Information
The contributions appear exclusively online and can therefore not be ordered.
The current main topics are “Development policy”, “Sustainability” and “Election and social research”. The contributions of these sub-series are presented for you on separate overview pages in addition to the overall series.