A, B and C v. Ireland (ECtHR, 2010): What Was Scarier Than a “Ban” Was the “Absence of Procedure”
Under the same country and the same law, why did it become “not a violation” for some, but “a violation” for someone else?
When I first read this judgment, I honestly found it a bit confusing. All three (A, B, and C) say something similar: “I could not obtain an abortion in Ireland, so I went abroad.” Yet the Court concluded “no violation” for two of them, and “a violation” for one. When a case deals with the same issue but the outcomes diverge, what makes the difference is often not “principle” but “procedure.” A, B and C v. Ireland stayed with me longer precisely because, rather than declaring a definitive position on abortion itself, it sharply asked whether the exception the state recognized actually worked in real life (that is, whether it was more than a right on paper).
Table of Contents
Case Background and the Three Applicants (A·B·C)
In 2010, Ireland was one of the European countries with the strictest abortion regulations. The Constitution provided that the life of the fetus and the life of the pregnant woman were to be protected equally, and in practice abortion was almost impossible except where the woman’s life was directly at risk. As a result, women with unwanted pregnancies were left with virtually no real option other than “traveling abroad.”
Applicants A, B, and C likewise all crossed to the United Kingdom to undergo the procedure because lawful access to abortion was not available in Ireland. On the surface, their situations looked similar, but the Court did not treat them as identical—and that difference becomes the core of the judgment.
Core Issue: Private Life (Article 8) and Abortion Regulation
The core issue in this case was not simply “should abortion be permitted?” The European Court of Human Rights framed a much narrower and more refined question: whether strict restrictions on abortion interfere with an individual’s private life, and if so, whether that interference can be justified.
| Issue | The Court’s question |
|---|---|
| Protection of private life | Whether decisions about pregnancy and childbirth fall within Article 8 |
| State interference | Whether strict abortion regulation can be justified |
| Effectiveness | Whether the permitted exception was actually accessible in practice |
Holding: No Violation for A·B, Violation for C
The Court did not lump the applicants together; it assessed each situation separately. This is precisely what makes the judgment a textbook example. For A and B, the Court recognized the hardship and suffering caused by the restriction, but did not view it as an interference that exceeded the state’s margin of appreciation.
- A·B: The restrictions were harsh, but not a violation of Article 8
- C: No procedure to determine whether her life was at risk → violation
- Key difference: not the “ban,” but the “lack of a way to confirm eligibility”
Margin of Appreciation: How Far Can the State Decide?
In this case, the European Court of Human Rights granted Ireland a relatively broad margin of appreciation. Because abortion remains a sensitive moral and ethical issue on which a full European consensus has not formed, the Court recognized that each state may set its regulatory level based on its historical, religious, and social context.
Accordingly, the Court did not declare that “Ireland’s abortion-ban policy itself is automatically a Convention violation.” Instead, it limited its review to whether the policy excessively infringed individual rights and whether minimum protective safeguards existed. This is also why the judgment is often described as “cautious.”
Procedural Duty: The “Permitted Exception” Must Operate
But the Court went one step further. Irish law, in theory, allowed abortion where the woman’s life was at risk, yet the problem was that it was entirely unclear who would decide that, how, and when. C could not find any official procedure to determine whether her situation fell within that exception.
| Category | The Court’s assessment |
|---|---|
| Substantive right | Abortion aimed at protecting the woman’s life is acknowledged |
| Procedure | No accessible procedure to obtain a determination |
| Conclusion | Violation of Article 8 |
Meaning of the Judgment and Key Discussion Points
The core message of A, B and C v. Ireland is straightforward. A state may make certain choices on morally contested issues, but it must not make even the rights it itself recognizes impossible to exercise in real life. After this judgment, Ireland faced pressure to reorganize its related laws and institutions, and that pressure later flowed into constitutional-amendment debates.
- Not a “right-to-abortion” declaration, but a “procedural guarantee” judgment
- Recognizing state discretion while setting a minimum human-rights floor
- Providing a benchmark repeatedly cited in later European abortion case law
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
No. The European Court of Human Rights did not declare abortion a general right. It emphasized, however, that an exceptional abortion the state already recognizes must be capable of functioning in practice.
For A and B, the Court acknowledged the health and welfare difficulties, but it did not consider them to rise to an interference exceeding Ireland’s margin of appreciation in strongly restricting abortion.
Although there was a legal provision allowing abortion where the woman’s life was at risk, there was no official procedure through which she could obtain a determination as to whether she qualified for that exception.
Alongside respect for private life (Article 8 of the Convention), the key is the idea of “procedural rights”—that procedures guaranteeing a substantive right are indispensable.
It does not impose a direct legislative duty on other states, but as ECtHR case law it serves as an important benchmark for designing abortion-related procedures in Convention states.
A state may restrict abortion, but it must not make even the exceptions it itself permits impossible to use in practice.
Why This Judgment Is Uncomfortable—and Why It Matters Because of That
A, B and C v. Ireland continues to be cited not because it provides a clean answer, but because it leaves an uncomfortable question behind. The Court did not definitively state that there is a right to abortion, nor that there is not. Instead, it pressed a very practical standard: “Does the right the state says it allows actually function in real life?” If, on the face of the legal text, a right seems to exist, but the person concerned must turn back at the doorway, can we truly say that right exists? This judgment makes clear that human rights are not only a matter of declaration, but a matter of institutional structure and procedure. That is why this case, while an abortion judgment, is also a decision that makes us re-examine every “exception clause” and every “conditional right.”





