Difference between revisions of "Boldt v. Boldt"

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'''Boldt v. Boldt''' is formally a child custody case from the state of Oregon, however it actually is about the proposed circumcision of a boy.
 
'''Boldt v. Boldt''' is formally a child custody case from the state of Oregon, however it actually is about the proposed circumcision of a boy.
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A long-running legal case in the United States, finally resolved in 2009, when courts in the state of Oregon ruled that a parent could not compel a child over which he had custody to get circumcised against the boy's will. The case is of interest in its potential to limit the power of parents to impose circumcision and similar physical alterations on children and in its implicit recognition that children have their own rights – to physical integrity and freedom of conscience and religion – independently of their parents' belief.
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[[Doctors Opposing Circumcision (D.O.C.)]] filed two amicus curiae briefs in this case and was successful in protecting the boy's [[foreskin]] from [[circumcision]].
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Category:USA
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[[Category:USA]]
Category:Litigation over circumcision
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[[Category:Litigation over circumcision]]
Category:Jurisprudence
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[[Category:Jurisprudence]]
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[[Category:Construction Site]]

Revision as of 15:43, 19 April 2020

Construction Site

This article is work in progress and not yet part of the free encyclopedia IntactiWiki.

 

Boldt v. Boldt is formally a child custody case from the state of Oregon, however it actually is about the proposed circumcision of a boy.

A long-running legal case in the United States, finally resolved in 2009, when courts in the state of Oregon ruled that a parent could not compel a child over which he had custody to get circumcised against the boy's will. The case is of interest in its potential to limit the power of parents to impose circumcision and similar physical alterations on children and in its implicit recognition that children have their own rights – to physical integrity and freedom of conscience and religion – independently of their parents' belief.

Doctors Opposing Circumcision (D.O.C.) filed two amicus curiae briefs in this case and was successful in protecting the boy's foreskin from circumcision.


External links