What Is Roe V. Wade And Why The New Abortion Verdict Puts Us On Edge?

Laws Against Abortion Put Many Women In Us At Risk Of Back-Alley Abortions Outside Institutional Care.

For Women In The Relatively  Liberal Democratic States And For Women Elsewhere Who Have The Means To  Travel To A Clinic Abortion May Still Be Accessible.

However Poor Women Especially  In Many Republican States May Find Traveling To Other States For  In-Clinic Abortions To Be An Impossible Challenge.

The United States Supreme Court On Friday Overturned The ‘Roe V.  Wade’ Verdict That Made Abortion A Constitutional Right In The  Country. What’S The News?

The Us Supreme Court On Friday In A Widely Anticipated Decision Ended  The Nation’S Constitutional Protections For Abortion That Had Been In  Place Nearly 50 Years In A Decision By Its Conservative Majority To  Overturn Roe V.

Wade The Court’S Landmark 1973 Judgment. Friday’S Outcome Will Allow  Individual States To More Heavily Regulate And Is Expected To Lead To  Abortion Bans In Roughly Half The States.

Abortion Foes Cheered The Ruling But Abortion-Rights Supporters  Including President Joe Biden Expressed Dismay And Pledged To Fight To  Restore The Rights.

The Ruling Came More Than A Month After The Stunning Leak Of A Draft  Opinion By Justice Samuel Alito Indicating The Court Was Prepared To  Take This Momentous Step.

What Does ‘Roe V. Wade’ Refers To? Roe  V. Wade Is The Name Of The Lawsuit That Led To The Landmark 1973 Us  Supreme Court Decision Establishing A Constitutional Right To Abortion  In The United States.

Who Were Roe And Wade? Jane  Roe Was A Pseudonym For Norma Mccorvey Who Was 22 Unmarried  Unemployed And Pregnant For The Third Time In 1969 When She Sought To  Have An Abortion In Texas.