For the half century that Roe v. Wade guaranteed reproduction rights nationwide, abortion advocates had to go to court to fight the hundreds of unnecessary or unconstitutional state restrictions designed to chip away at that right.

Now that Roe is overturned and states in half the country have banned abortion or are about to ban it, advocates are back – this time in state courts, attempting to block abortion bans.

As well they should be. State bans on abortion may be more legally vulnerable than they seem with Roe overturned and the Supreme Court handing states the power to prohibit abortion. For example, some bans may be susceptible to being overturned because they conflict with state constitutions that have been interpreted by courts to guarantee a right to abortion.

These are uphill battles, but they’re worth fighting – especially in the short term. Clinics are closing and patients desperate for abortion care sometimes have to travel hundreds of miles to another state.

Total bans or bans at six weeks gestation – when women generally don’t even know they’re pregnant – are in effect in 10 states currently, according to officials at the Guttmacher Institute, which researches abortion policy and supports abortion rights. Florida currently bans abortions at 15 weeks of gestation. In three other states – Arizona, West Virginia and Wisconsin – clinics have stopped providing abortions because the laws are unclear on whether it’s outlawed. Each of those states has a pre-Roe ban. But it is legally unclear if and when those bans can go into effect.

Consider how ridiculously confusing the laws are in Arizona: After Roe was overturned, Arizona state Senate Republicans announced that a pre-Roe ban would take effect. But that ban (dating to 1901) had been blocked by courts since 1973 (the year Roe was decided) and some argued a court would have to lift the block. Months earlier, Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey said a new 15-week ban would take effect if Roe fell – except the law doesn’t make it clear when it would be implemented. To be safe, Planned Parenthood stopped providing abortions.

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In some states with multiple abortion bans on the books, advocates are arguing there is confusion about which laws to follow and that all must be blocked until clarified. In Louisiana, for example, officials issued conflicting statements about which of three bans were in effect, and lawyers argued that the laws were unconstitutionally vague.

At a hearing last Friday, a Louisiana state judge ruled that the groups needed to file their case in a court in Baton Rouge because it concerned the state legislature, which means the state’s ban can go into effect until the lawsuit is refiled and a Baton Rouge judge issues a temporary injunction.

Elsewhere, lawyers successfully got courts to temporarily block abortion trigger bans in Utah and in Kentucky.

The more promising cases are the ones in which advocates contend that the bans conflict with state constitutions where privacy rights have been interpreted to include the right to an abortion. That’s the argument in lawsuits filed in Kentucky and Idaho, for example.

Efforts are underway in other states, including Michigan, to get measures on state ballots that will enshrine a right to abortion. The California Legislature has placed a constitutional amendment to protect abortion on the November ballot.

While all these legal efforts are worth pursuing, they are no substitute for a national right to abortion and contraception. As Alexis McGill Johnson, the president of Planned Parenthood, noted grimly, clinics in half the country where abortion is legal cannot handle the needs of an entire country.

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