Supreme Court decision striking down the former Criminal Code abortion provisions.
Last evidence check means this project’s automated public-repository check; it is not a government audit, regulator audit, external audit, or assurance engagement.
Source statusSupreme Court of Canada source record checked 2026-05-05
Review trailSource usage is tied to public topics and claim records in the repository.
Source typecourt
Topics using source1
Claims referenced5
Why this source matters
Baseline source for abortion-reproductive-health-rights topic. This record currently supports 1 topic and 5 claims in the public repository.
Evidence details
This source row records the publisher, source type, reliability label, access date, original URL, and any archive copy available to this project.
Used by topics
001Could Alberta independence change abortion access and reproductive health rights?Abortion and reproductive healthcare currently sit within Canadian criminal-law, constitutional, health-system, and provincial-service baselines; independence would require explicit legal and service-continuity commitments rather than assumptions.
Referenced claims
001abortion-reproductive-health-rightsCurrent sources establish the existing post-Morgentaler legal baseline, Canada Health Act health-system principles, and Alberta Health Services public service information.002abortion-reproductive-health-rightsAlberta could choose to preserve current abortion access through transition legislation, health funding rules, clinical guidance, service pathways, privacy protections, and regulator instructions.003abortion-reproductive-health-rightsReproductive-health access could be affected quickly if legal authority, public funding, provider guidance, facility access, referral pathways, privacy rules, or remedies were unclear during transition.004abortion-reproductive-health-rightsFormal legality and practical access are separate questions; patients and clinicians would need clear rules for insured services, referrals, medication and procedural care, emergency care, follow-up care, privacy, and complaints.005abortion-reproductive-health-rightsCurrent sources do not settle how an independent Alberta would protect, fund, regulate, restrict, or expand reproductive-health services.