Departurism
Departurism is a libertarian approach to the abortion controversy developed by Sean Parr which argues, contrary to evictionism, that the lethal removal of an unwanted fetus ought to be legally impermissible.
Commonalities with Evictionism
Both departurism and evictionism acknowledge that a fetus is a distinct, living human being and, further, admit his personhood. What makes these theories uniquely libertarian is that they view the abortion issue through the lens of property rights, allowing that an unwanted fetus is to a mother what a trespasser is to the owner of the property in question.Moreover, each of these approaches argue that the fetus is without mens rea in his occupation of the mother’s premises, and so his treatment at the hands of the mother must be in accord with gentleness.
Gentleness
Gentleness is an ex ante element of law—akin to the ex post element, proportionality—which states that the victim of such an invasion, if he means to halt it while it is occurring, must use only the least severe measures necessary in order to do so. Failure to bring the non-criminal aggression to an end via the gentlest means possible places the victim “at risk of falling on the wrong side of the non-aggression principle," violating it “to a far greater extent than is the trespasser.” Because all fetuses “are equally innocent,” this attempt to curtail property owners from dealing with such trespassers “more severely than libertarian punishment theory allows” is applicable to unwanted fetuses who are the result of rape no less than those whom are consensually conceived.Dispute with Evictionism
Where departurism and evictionism differ is in their understanding of what gentleness ought to look like when it is properly applied to situations of trespass within the womb.The evictionist view is that the mother may not directly kill the unwanted child, but she may indirectly do so by evicting him from her premises during a time in which he is non-viable outside the womb. This lethal eviction however, if it's to be in accord with gentleness, must proceed only after the relevant authorities have been notified to see if they are able and willing to prevent this removal from becoming fatal.
Departurism, likewise, holds that the mother may evict but not kill the trespassing fetus, but, contrary to evictionism, neither may she kill him by eviction. The mother, if her actions are to conform to gentleness, must allow for the continued departure of the trespasser until such time that eviction no longer entails his death. That is, "it is only the lethal eviction of a fetus during a normal pregnancy that departurism views as discordant with gentleness and, thus, a violation of the NAP."
Because the requirements of both views are said to find their justification in gentleness, it is the view whose requirement best conforms to this principle that should be preferable on libertarian grounds.
The Departurist Argument
The departurist argument is an attempt to- take into account the unique characteristics of an unwanted pregnancy in order to avoid unnuanced comparisons which liken womb-aged children to ordinary, criminal trespassers; and
- show the NAP-preserving gentleness principle to be the lens through which libertarians properly discern this issue.
S1 represents the situation of a trespasser unable to engage in human action, leaving the premises of the property owner, not endangering the property owner's life and where, removal from the premises will result in this trespasser's death. S2 represents the situation of an unwanted fetus in the uterus of his mother. A represents the course of action in which the property owner allows for the trespasser to continue his departure until such time that eviction will not necessitate his death.
- The course of action that libertarian legal theory ought to endorse in S1 is A.
- S2 is relevantly similar to S1.
- Therefore, the course of action that libertarian legal theory ought to endorse in S2 is A.
Premise One
Departurism makes the case that the evictionist-proposed course of action is not transformed into a less harsh means of ending the trespass simply because the evictionist notification requirement has first been satisfied. The departurist indictment goes on to state that this evictionist position represents “nothing if not a textbook example of the very response on the part of the victim that gentleness was placed into libertarian law so as to preclude.” Moreover, the supposed gentleness of evictionism falls short when compared to the departurist-proposed course of action. That is, departurism’s means comport better to gentleness in that they are
- consistent with stopping the aggression, and
- comparatively less harmful than evictionism’s means.
Premise Two
The trespasser is incapable of purposeful behavior.
The trespasser is in the process of departing the property owner’s premises.
Although the evictionist has made no quarrel with either of these points, departurism has elucidated how the latter condition relates to S2 in the following way:
Furthermore, evictionism does not dispute the presence in S2 of the remaining conditions of S1—as these conditions represent, respectively, the most prevalent and the most relevant instances of uterine trespass:
The trespasser is not jeopardizing the proprietor’s life via aggression against property rights in the person.
The trespasser's eviction from said premises would necessitate his death.
Premise Three
Practical consistency prohibits the trespasser in S2 from being treated differently from the trespasser in S1 because all of the relevant conditions of the latter situation are found also in the former. It is for this reason that departurism holds thatCriticism of Evictionism
From Gentleness
Departurism charges evictionism with radically conceiving of the gentleness principle not as the least harmful manner possible consistent with stopping the aggression, but as the most expedient manner possible consistent with stopping the aggressor. The departurist claim is that this comprehension destroys the spirit or intended purpose of the gentleness principle by twisting it in order to permit victims of non-criminal aggression to engage in severe reactions and over-responses—the very things which are the principle’s purpose to prohibit.From Positive Obligation
Both evictionism and departurism contain requirements that the mother withhold the eviction of the unwanted child for some amount of time. For the former, that amount of time is the duration required for the mother's notification of the authorities; for the latter, it is the duration required for the child's continued departure to reach the point at which his eviction no longer necessitates a NAP-violation. The departurist claim is that the evictionist notification requirement constitutes a positive obligation, and so is anathema to libertarianism. Evictionism's requirement, unlike departurism's, is a positive one because it neither derives from nor constitutes the gentlest manner possible of bringing the fetal trespass to an end.From Duration
It is the departurist view that evictionism transforms libertarianism into an ideology of squatters by means of its positive obligation that the mother notify the authorities prior to her lethal eviction of the fetus. The departurist claim is that this permits the fetus to occupy the mother's premises, without her permission, for the duration of that notification.Departurism further holds that evictionism transforms libertarianism into an ideology of corpses. The evictionist view is that because the trespasser in this case cannot engage in purposeful behavior, the phenomenon of implicit contracts is impotent to prevent his lethal eviction from the mother’s uterus. But womb-aged children are not the only category of persons to whom it can be argued that implicit contracts are not applicable. The departurist claim is that, under evictionism, any guest who is mentally or developmentally incapable of entering into a contract may have his invitation rescinded by his host at any time, and this newly-designated "trespasser" can then be lethally and lawfully removed from the premises. The evictionist has not balked at this characterization of his view, stating that the departurist makes a "not totally unreasonable point." The evictionist has even gone on to concede that this "of course sounds horrible," before attempting to justify it on consequentialist grounds.