This Article has two aims. First, it defends a continuing role for the right of privacy in arguments -for women\u27s reproductive freedom against charges that privacy is an impoverished concept. Second, it raises cautions about certain feminist critiques of privacy that would ground this freedom in notions of reproductive responsibilities. As this Article was first presented at a conference, Reproductive Issues in a Post-Roe\u27 World, held in the wake of Webster v. Reproductive Health Services,2 the first question is: Are we now, given the Supreme Court\u27s recent decision in Planned Parenthood v. Casey,\u27 in a post-Roe world ? Furthermore, what remains of the right of privacy