What is the Matter with Dobbs?

Andrew Coan* | 26.2 | Citation: Andrew Coan, What is the Matter with Dobbs?, 26 U. Pa. J. Const. L. 282 (2024).

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Contrary to its critics, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization is not illegitimate or lawless.  It is a highly consequential but fundamentally ordinary example of the inextricable connections between morality and constitutional law.  If abortion is akin to murder, Dobbs could not—and should not—have come out any other way.  If abortion is essential to personal autonomy and equal citizenship, the case was wrongly decided and should be reversed at the earliest opportunity.

The appropriate response to decisions like Dobbs is to criticize the moral judgments underlying them.  Depending on the circumstances, institutional responses, such as court packing and jurisdiction stripping, might also be justified.  But conflating moral disagreement with lawlessness is both unpersuasive and a distraction from the core issue.  It is also a form of crying wolf that risks backfiring when the charge of lawlessness is actually justified.

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* Milton O. Riepe Chair in Constitutional Law and Associate Dean for Research, University of Arizona, James E. Rogers College of Law.  

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