Contents
Introduction
Economic Survey 2025–26 underscores gender equity as core to human capital; amid rising litigation under the MTP Act, 2026 Supreme Court rulings reposition reproductive autonomy as dignity-centric, rights-based constitutional entitlement.
Evolution of Abortion Jurisprudence
- Colonial to Post-Independence: Abortion was criminalised under IPC Sections 312-316; MTP Act 1971 introduced limited exceptions on medical and humanitarian grounds.
- 1971-2021 Phase: Provider-centric model required doctor approval, treating abortion as a regulated concession rather than a right.
- 2021 Amendment Shift: Expanded gestational limits (20–24 weeks) and categories but retained provider-centric approach.
- Judicial Pivot (2022–26): Courts increasingly interpret abortion as a facet of personal liberty under Article 21.
Woman-Centered Jurisprudence: Key Constitutional Principles
- Bodily Autonomy & Privacy: Courts now recognise unwanted pregnancy as violation of dignity, prioritising mental health alongside physical risk. Rooted in Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India, affirming decisional autonomy.
- Reproductive Choice as Right: X v. Principal Secretary (2022) extended rights to unmarried women, removing discriminatory barriers.
- Minor Survivors Focus: In 2026 cases, SC allowed terminations beyond 24 weeks for rape survivors, stressing trauma and choice.
- Broad Mental Health Interpretation: Forced continuation of pregnancy is viewed as grave injury to mental health. Permitting termination beyond 24 weeks prioritizing dignity over procedural rigidity. Example: 30-week termination case.
- Gender Justice: Aligns with SDG-5 goals of bodily autonomy and equality. Example: reproductive rights.
Limitations of Current Legal Framework
- Arbitrary Time Limits: 24-week cap ignores delayed reporting due to stigma, trauma, or lack of awareness in minor rape cases.
- Medical Board Gatekeeping: Bureaucratic hurdles often push pregnancies beyond legal limits, endangering women.
- MTP–POCSO Conflict: Mandatory reporting discourages minors from seeking safe abortion.
- Inconsistency with Rights: Rigid timelines conflict with evolving Article 21 jurisprudence on privacy and dignity.
- Litigation Burden: Over 1,000 petitions since 2021 indicate systemic inadequacy.
Need for a Rights-Based Legislative Framework
- Dignity Over Timelines: Law should presume autonomy, with medical oversight as safeguard, not barrier. Example: choice model.
- Harmonisation with POCSO: Mandatory reporting deters minor survivors; framework must balance protection and access.
- Decriminalization Approach: Shift abortion from IPC exception to healthcare entitlement. Shift from exception-based regime to rights-based model reduces litigation burden on courts.
- Equity Focus: Ensures vulnerable groups are not penalised by procedural rigidity. Example: Rights-based presumption.
- Alignment with Global Standards: WHO advocates abortion on request with safeguards. Example: global norms.
Way Forward
- Amend MTP Act: Remove upper gestational limits for rape survivors and minors; adopt “best interest of woman” standard.
- Time-Bound Processes: Mandate fast-track medical and judicial review for late-term cases.
- Decentralised Access: Strengthen rural healthcare infrastructure and training for safe services.
- Awareness Campaigns: Reduce stigma and improve early reporting through community education.
- Monitoring Mechanism: Establish national registry for transparent tracking of cases and outcomes.
Conclusion
As Justice D.Y. Chandrachud held in K.S. Puttaswamy (2017): Individual autonomy as a core component of the fundamental right to privacy. Reproductive choice is the most intimate of these decisions the law must protect it, not obstruct it.


