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International Journal of Law, Policy and the Family 2004 18(3):319-342; doi:10.1093/lawfam/18.3.319
© 2004 by Oxford University Press
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THE FRENCH ‘TRADITION’ OF ANONYMOUS BIRTH: THE LINES OF ARGUMENT

Nadine Lefaucheur1

1 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, France (Centre de recherche sur les pouvoirs locaux dans la Caraïbe, Fort de France, Université des Antilles et de la Guyane)

In France, the issue of women’s right to give birth anonymously versus the right to know one’s ‘origins’ has become a very sensitive one over the last decade, with some legislative changes, a large media coverage, and passionate debates taking place. The paper presents some data that help to understand the current French national debate (Part 2), and analyses the main lines of arguments of this debate (Part 3) and of the case Odièvre v France before the European Court of Human Rights (Part 4). In spite of the passing of a law in 2002 creating a National Council for the Access to Personal Origins, the traditional line of ‘respect for life’ arguments for the maintenance of accouchement sous X has prevailed on both the French and European scenes. In France, surprisingly, this line has met with the support of the feminist ‘pro-choice’ movement, and converged with a line of arguments that criticizes the supposed ‘biogenetization’ of the society, and advocates a definition of the parent–child relation as a ‘purely social construction’.


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