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Anita L. Allen Anita L. Allen
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Akhil Reed Amar Akhil Reed Amar
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Jack M. Balkin Jack M. Balkin
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Teresa Stanton Collett Teresa Stanton Collett
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Michael Stokes Paulsen Michael Stokes Paulsen
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Jeffrey Rosen Jeffrey Rosen
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Jed Rubenfeld Jed Rubenfeld
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Reva B. Siegel Reva B. Siegel
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Cass R. Sunstein Cass R. Sunstein
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Mark Tushnet Mark Tushnet
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Robin West Robin West
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Notes Notes
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Cite
Extract
I asked the contributors to this book to give a short account of why they wrote their Roe opinion as they did and to describe the goals they were trying to accomplish. I also wanted them to give a chance to give credit where it was due for sources written after 1973, which they could not quote directly in their opinions. Here are their responses.
Anita L. Allen
The first time I heard a woman say that she would get an abortion if she were ever pregnant again, I was about thirteen and thoroughly indignant. “How could she,” I thought. “What are women for if not having babies?” Never mind that the woman in question was a high school dropout with no job and six children. Half a dozen years later, Roe v. Wade was decided. I do not recall how or why I changed my mind about abortion. However, like most women of my generation, I came to view Roe as a mostly positive development in the law.
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