McGee v. Attorney General (Ireland, 1974): The Constitutional Discovery of the Right to Privacy
A single law banning contraception brought to the surface a “right not written into the Constitution.”
McGee v. Attorney General is a decisive turning point that can never be left out when discussing Irish constitutional case law. In 1970s Ireland, importing and selling contraceptives was itself a criminal offense, and private sexual and family life was widely assumed to fall naturally within the scope of state regulation. Yet, in this case, the Supreme Court recognized the “marital right to privacy”—a right not expressly stated anywhere in the constitutional text—as a constitutional right. When I first encountered the judgment, what struck me most was that the Court did not say, “If it is not in the Constitution, it is not a right.” Instead, it read a new fundamental right out of the Constitution’s structure and values. For that reason, the McGee judgment is evaluated not as a simple contraception case, but as a case that transformed constitutional interpretive methodology itself. Today, I will carefully organize how the Irish Supreme Court discovered the right to privacy in this case and what impact that discovery had on later case law and social change.
Table of Contents
Case background: The contraception ban and the start of the litigation
In early 1970s Ireland, importing and selling contraceptives was completely prohibited by law. The legislation reflected strong Catholic ethics, and at the time, there was a broadly entrenched view in society that private sexual life and family planning were legitimate objects of public regulation. The problem was that this restriction applied with no exception even to married couples.
Mrs. McGee faced serious health risks if she became pregnant again, but she could not obtain contraceptives legally. She ultimately filed suit, arguing that the law violated her constitutional rights, and the case expanded beyond a simple criminal or administrative dispute into a constitutional question: “How far may the state intrude into the private sphere of a married couple?”
Constitutional issue: A right that is not expressly stated
The central difficulty in this case was that the Irish Constitution does not expressly state a “right to privacy” or a “freedom to use contraception.” The government argued that a court cannot create new rights that are not in the constitutional text. In other words, contraception regulation was said to fall within the legislature’s policy judgment.
By contrast, the plaintiff emphasized that the Constitution provides special protection for marriage and the family. The claim was that state interference even with a couple’s intimate decisions—especially decisions directly connected to health and childbirth—contradicted the Constitution’s foundational structure and the ideal of human dignity. In the end, the issue condensed into one question: “Even if a right is not written down, can a right nonetheless be necessarily derived from the Constitution?”
The Supreme Court’s reasoning and logic
- Deriving a private sphere for spouses from the constitutional provisions protecting marriage and the family
- Finding that a blanket ban on contraception is excessive state intrusion
- Treating the Constitution as a value system, not a closed list of enumerated rights
The Supreme Court held that, even if the Constitution does not expressly enumerate the right, a “marital right to privacy” can be derived from constitutional values such as human dignity and the protection of the family. Accordingly, it declared that a law imposing a blanket prohibition on importing contraceptives violated the Constitution.
The constitutional meaning of the right to privacy
The core of the McGee judgment lies less in formally naming a standalone “right to privacy” than in recognizing the inviolability of a private sphere within the Constitution’s overall structure. The Supreme Court understood the constitutional provisions protecting marriage and the family as guaranteeing not only an institutional framework, but also the intimate decisions made within that framework.
In particular, it held that decisions by spouses about when and how to have children are not matters the state can regulate uniformly. This interpretation did not reduce privacy to “a narrow freedom to keep things secret,” but instead treated it as a core element of human dignity and personal autonomy.
Subsequent case law and social impact
| Area of impact | Nature of change | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Legislation | Step-by-step relaxation of contraception regulation | Reduction of the scope of state interference |
| Case law | Expanded recognition of unenumerated rights | Greater flexibility in constitutional interpretation |
| Social attitudes | Greater respect for private decision-making | Strengthened rights-consciousness |
After the McGee judgment, Irish constitutional adjudication developed in the direction of recognizing “unenumerated rights.” This became the foundation for later debates relating to divorce, sexual autonomy, and medical decision-making.
Key takeaways for exams and reports
- A leading case on the recognition of unenumerated rights
- Deriving privacy from provisions protecting marriage and the family
- Setting constitutional limits on excessive moral legislation by the state
In an exam answer, you can accurately capture the core by presenting McGee as both “the discovery of a constitutional right to privacy” and “a case that interpreted the Constitution as a living document.”
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
No. The key point is not contraception itself, but that the Court set a constitutional limit on how far the state can regulate a married couple’s private decisions.
The Supreme Court interpreted the Constitution not as fixed sentences, but as a value system. Unenumerated rights are understood as rights derived from the Constitution’s spirit.
That criticism exists. However, the Court explained that it was not replacing legislation, but declaring the constitutional limits of regulation that violates the Constitution.
McGee was discussed primarily in the context of spouses, but later case law shows a tendency to expand toward an individual right to privacy.
Yes, in that both recognize a marital right to privacy. The difference is that McGee grounded the right in Ireland’s specific constitutional provisions protecting the family.
It is helpful to organize your answer around keywords such as unenumerated rights, the right to privacy, protection of marriage and the family, and a “living” constitutional interpretation.
In closing: The Constitution did not remain silent
McGee v. Attorney General squarely overturned the idea that “if it is not written in the Constitution, it is not a right.” The Irish Supreme Court read the Constitution not as a mere collection of clauses, but as a normative value system in which human dignity and the protection of the family are alive. As a result, it drew a clear line: beyond the concrete issue of a contraception ban, there are constitutional limits on how far the state may intrude into the most private human decisions. After the judgment, the right to privacy and unenumerated rights became major axes of Irish constitutional interpretation, and society, too, came to adopt a far broader perspective on personal autonomy than before. McGee continues to be cited today because it is not just a product of its time, but an exemplary case showing how a constitution can and should “converse” with a changing society.





