Legislating Condoms and Other Contraceptives: A Philippine Constitutional Law Perspective

The 1987 Philippine Constitution entrenches interesting provisions that reflect Filipino values. For example, it mandates that the State must protect the life of the unborn child and protect the family as the basic social institution. These two commands are rooted in the country’s deep Catholic trad...

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Main Author: Ingles, Ignatius Michael
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2014
Subjects:
Law
Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/ateneo-school-of-law-pubs/40
http://www.iconnectblog.com/2014/10/legislating-condoms-and-other-contraceptives-a-philippine-constitutional-law-perspective/
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.ateneo-school-of-law-pubs-10392022-03-28T06:32:22Z Legislating Condoms and Other Contraceptives: A Philippine Constitutional Law Perspective Ingles, Ignatius Michael The 1987 Philippine Constitution entrenches interesting provisions that reflect Filipino values. For example, it mandates that the State must protect the life of the unborn child and protect the family as the basic social institution. These two commands are rooted in the country’s deep Catholic tradition and its family-oriented culture. In 2012, the Philippine Congress passed a law that struck deep into these Filipino values and traditions. The law sought to legislate on reproductive health and contraceptives. The law caused uproar from the Catholic Church and raised various constitutional questions. In 2014, the Philippine Supreme Court ruled in Imbong v. Executive Secretary Ochoa where, using a rights-based approach, it answered novel constitutional issues raised by the new law – the constitutional prohibition of abortion vis-à-vis the legality of contraceptives, the right of conscientious objectors against the State interest of population control, and the right of privacy of the family vis-à-vis State-sponsored reproductive health measures. As the country seeks to curb poverty and population growth, the implications of Imbong are far-reaching and will undoubtedly be felt for decades to come. Imbong and the controversial law that led to it are discussed below. 2014-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/ateneo-school-of-law-pubs/40 http://www.iconnectblog.com/2014/10/legislating-condoms-and-other-contraceptives-a-philippine-constitutional-law-perspective/ Ateneo School of Law Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo abortion Contraception Philippine Constitution RH Law Right to Life Right to Privacy Right to Religious Freedom Family Law Health Law and Policy Law
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic abortion
Contraception
Philippine Constitution
RH Law
Right to Life
Right to Privacy
Right to Religious Freedom
Family Law
Health Law and Policy
Law
spellingShingle abortion
Contraception
Philippine Constitution
RH Law
Right to Life
Right to Privacy
Right to Religious Freedom
Family Law
Health Law and Policy
Law
Ingles, Ignatius Michael
Legislating Condoms and Other Contraceptives: A Philippine Constitutional Law Perspective
description The 1987 Philippine Constitution entrenches interesting provisions that reflect Filipino values. For example, it mandates that the State must protect the life of the unborn child and protect the family as the basic social institution. These two commands are rooted in the country’s deep Catholic tradition and its family-oriented culture. In 2012, the Philippine Congress passed a law that struck deep into these Filipino values and traditions. The law sought to legislate on reproductive health and contraceptives. The law caused uproar from the Catholic Church and raised various constitutional questions. In 2014, the Philippine Supreme Court ruled in Imbong v. Executive Secretary Ochoa where, using a rights-based approach, it answered novel constitutional issues raised by the new law – the constitutional prohibition of abortion vis-à-vis the legality of contraceptives, the right of conscientious objectors against the State interest of population control, and the right of privacy of the family vis-à-vis State-sponsored reproductive health measures. As the country seeks to curb poverty and population growth, the implications of Imbong are far-reaching and will undoubtedly be felt for decades to come. Imbong and the controversial law that led to it are discussed below.
format text
author Ingles, Ignatius Michael
author_facet Ingles, Ignatius Michael
author_sort Ingles, Ignatius Michael
title Legislating Condoms and Other Contraceptives: A Philippine Constitutional Law Perspective
title_short Legislating Condoms and Other Contraceptives: A Philippine Constitutional Law Perspective
title_full Legislating Condoms and Other Contraceptives: A Philippine Constitutional Law Perspective
title_fullStr Legislating Condoms and Other Contraceptives: A Philippine Constitutional Law Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Legislating Condoms and Other Contraceptives: A Philippine Constitutional Law Perspective
title_sort legislating condoms and other contraceptives: a philippine constitutional law perspective
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2014
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/ateneo-school-of-law-pubs/40
http://www.iconnectblog.com/2014/10/legislating-condoms-and-other-contraceptives-a-philippine-constitutional-law-perspective/
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