In their new book, excerpted below, Martha A. Field and Valerie A. Sanchez present
their views of American legal doctrine and social policies that have influenced and still
govern procreation and parenting by persons with retardation. The authors central
thesis is that persons with retardation should have the same legal authority to make their
own decisions as the rest of the population in all sexual and reproductive matters,
including sterilization, abortion, and contraception. Currently society allows all adults,
except those with mental retardation, to make these reproductive decisions for themselves.
While treating persons with retardation the same as others in this regard would
considerably alter the law in every state, Field and Sanchez argue that such a change is
feasible and is the only fair and respectful treatment of persons with mental retardation.
"For the moment at least, society has made the judgment that anyone who can have a
baby can presumptively parent and that a baby or child will be removed from the biological
parent only in extreme circumstances. It has also adopted processes very protective of
biological parents, evaluating them, if at all, one parent at a time, without dismissing
them because of their category be it unwed fathers or gay men and lesbians or
persons with mental illness. The only argument that persons with retardation need in order
substantially to better their legal position and increase their legal rights is that they
must be treated the same way others are. Accordingly, parents with retardation will
sometimes lose their children, but when they do, it will be for the same reasons other
persons do: because they have been adjudicated on an individual basis to be unfit; they
will not be eliminated because of presumptions against them simply because of retardation.
And while some parents with retardation will lose their child or children, others will
raise children successfully, as some are already doing. . . . If procreation and parenting choices are permitted to persons who have retardation
women and men on the same basis as they are to others, it is not clear how
greatly results will change, or how quickly. But the success of the change does not depend
on how many babies women with retardation decide to have or keep. The reform will have
achieved its aim if persons with retardation are more fully respected, are allowed to
participate, and are given some power in determining the direction of their own
lives." Martha A. Field is the Langdell Professor of Law at HLS and a constitutional law
scholar. She also has served on the Massachusetts Governors Commission on Mental
Retardation. Valerie A. Sanchez is a former lecturer at the School and an academic
practitioner in American civil liberties law and alternative dispute resolution.

Professor Martha A. Field and Valerie A. Sanchez
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Equal Treatment for People with Mental Retardation: Having and Raising Children
Harvard University Press, 2000