The right to home birth: A choice, not a coincidence: And some legal consequences

In this article, the authors deal with certain legal aspects of home birth, in particular as recognised by the European Court of Human Rights and from the perspective of present Serbian legislation. The number of women giving birth at their homes is still significantly lower than those wishing to gi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Simić Jelena, Jerinić Jelena
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Union University, Faculty of Law, Belgrade 2014-01-01
Series:Pravni Zapisi
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/2217-2815/2014/2217-28151401120S.pdf
id doaj-5ebf23716d4845a883a06ba9828cee41
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5ebf23716d4845a883a06ba9828cee412020-11-24T21:36:21ZengUnion University, Faculty of Law, Belgrade Pravni Zapisi2217-28152406-13872014-01-01511201612217-28151401120SThe right to home birth: A choice, not a coincidence: And some legal consequencesSimić Jelena0Jerinić Jelena1Univerzitet Union u Beogradu, Pravni fakultetUniverzitet Union u Beogradu, Pravni fakultetIn this article, the authors deal with certain legal aspects of home birth, in particular as recognised by the European Court of Human Rights and from the perspective of present Serbian legislation. The number of women giving birth at their homes is still significantly lower than those wishing to give birth at a hospital, both in Serbia and in Europe. Even with that in mind, the authors assert that the state does not have the right to deny a woman her right to choose the circumstances and the environment in which she will give birth. By doing that the state breaches the woman's right to privacy, right to personal autonomy and right to self-determination in respect of her own body, which are all founded in the constitutionally guaranteed inviolability of the human personality. That is why the authors believe the state is obliged to provide the legitimacy to the woman's choice of the place of her child's birth. Moreover, the state should take a step further and enable the woman with accessible and professional medical assistance (of a midwife) in case she wishes to give birth at her home. Further on, the research into Serbian legislation and practice conducted by the authors and presented in this article, demonstrates that even though current Serbian legislation on birth registration expressly provides for registration of birth outside of medical institutions, that its implementation is not uniform across the state, leading to discrimination of these parents and their children, at least in some areas of Serbia. Unequal treatment in relation to registration of births which occurred outside of hospitals can be attributed to several factors, among which, the registrars' desire to prevent undesirable situations such as obduction of children or false registration of birth certainly cannot be underestimated. However, as the authors point out, this must not be at the expence of parents who, by practicing their right to choose the place of childbirth, choose that their children be born at their homes. Because of that, the authors particularly stress the need for thorough analysis of legislation - both in the area of health protection and birth registration - so that clearer regulation would ensure realisation of the right to choose the place of childbirth which the European Court of Human Rights declared to be an element of the right to privacy guaranteed by the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/2217-2815/2014/2217-28151401120S.pdfhome birthfreedom of choicemidwifediscriminationright to respect of private lifeEuropean court of human rightsbirth registrationpublic registrarsbirth records
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simić Jelena
Jerinić Jelena
spellingShingle Simić Jelena
Jerinić Jelena
The right to home birth: A choice, not a coincidence: And some legal consequences
Pravni Zapisi
home birth
freedom of choice
midwife
discrimination
right to respect of private life
European court of human rights
birth registration
public registrars
birth records
author_facet Simić Jelena
Jerinić Jelena
author_sort Simić Jelena
title The right to home birth: A choice, not a coincidence: And some legal consequences
title_short The right to home birth: A choice, not a coincidence: And some legal consequences
title_full The right to home birth: A choice, not a coincidence: And some legal consequences
title_fullStr The right to home birth: A choice, not a coincidence: And some legal consequences
title_full_unstemmed The right to home birth: A choice, not a coincidence: And some legal consequences
title_sort right to home birth: a choice, not a coincidence: and some legal consequences
publisher Union University, Faculty of Law, Belgrade
series Pravni Zapisi
issn 2217-2815
2406-1387
publishDate 2014-01-01
description In this article, the authors deal with certain legal aspects of home birth, in particular as recognised by the European Court of Human Rights and from the perspective of present Serbian legislation. The number of women giving birth at their homes is still significantly lower than those wishing to give birth at a hospital, both in Serbia and in Europe. Even with that in mind, the authors assert that the state does not have the right to deny a woman her right to choose the circumstances and the environment in which she will give birth. By doing that the state breaches the woman's right to privacy, right to personal autonomy and right to self-determination in respect of her own body, which are all founded in the constitutionally guaranteed inviolability of the human personality. That is why the authors believe the state is obliged to provide the legitimacy to the woman's choice of the place of her child's birth. Moreover, the state should take a step further and enable the woman with accessible and professional medical assistance (of a midwife) in case she wishes to give birth at her home. Further on, the research into Serbian legislation and practice conducted by the authors and presented in this article, demonstrates that even though current Serbian legislation on birth registration expressly provides for registration of birth outside of medical institutions, that its implementation is not uniform across the state, leading to discrimination of these parents and their children, at least in some areas of Serbia. Unequal treatment in relation to registration of births which occurred outside of hospitals can be attributed to several factors, among which, the registrars' desire to prevent undesirable situations such as obduction of children or false registration of birth certainly cannot be underestimated. However, as the authors point out, this must not be at the expence of parents who, by practicing their right to choose the place of childbirth, choose that their children be born at their homes. Because of that, the authors particularly stress the need for thorough analysis of legislation - both in the area of health protection and birth registration - so that clearer regulation would ensure realisation of the right to choose the place of childbirth which the European Court of Human Rights declared to be an element of the right to privacy guaranteed by the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.
topic home birth
freedom of choice
midwife
discrimination
right to respect of private life
European court of human rights
birth registration
public registrars
birth records
url https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/2217-2815/2014/2217-28151401120S.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT simicjelena therighttohomebirthachoicenotacoincidenceandsomelegalconsequences
AT jerinicjelena therighttohomebirthachoicenotacoincidenceandsomelegalconsequences
AT simicjelena righttohomebirthachoicenotacoincidenceandsomelegalconsequences
AT jerinicjelena righttohomebirthachoicenotacoincidenceandsomelegalconsequences
_version_ 1725941478423789568