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Assisted Dying: Reflections on the Need for Law Reform (Biomedical Law & Ethics Library)
 
 

Assisted Dying: Reflections on the Need for Law Reform (Biomedical Law & Ethics Library) [Paperback]

Sheila McLean (Author)

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Book Description

Biomedical Law & Ethics Library December 2, 2006

Assisted Dying explores the law relating to euthanasia and assisted suicide, tracing its development from prohibition through to the laissez faire attitude adopted in a number of countries in the 21st Century. This book provides an in-depth critique of the arguments surrounding legislative control of such practices and particularly looks into the regulatory role of the state. In the classical tradition of libertarianism, the state is generally presumed to have a remit to intervene where an individual’s actions threaten another, rather than harm the individuals themselves. This arguably leaves a question mark over the state’s determined intervention, in the UK and elsewhere, into the private and highly personal choices of individuals to die rather than live. The perceived role of the state in safeguarding the moral values of the community and the need for third party involvement in assisted suicide and euthanasia could be thought to raise these practices to a different level. These considerations may be in direct conflict with the so called right to die espoused by some individuals and groups within the community. However this book will argue that the state’s interests are and should be second to the interests that the people themselves have in choosing their own death.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"In this excellent and well-reasoned text, Sheila Mclean outlines the debate about whether or not assisted dying should be legalized in the UK." - Hazel Biggs, Lancaster University, UK, Mortality, Volume 14, Issue 1, 2009

About the Author

Sheila Mclean is International Bar Association Professor of Law Ethics in Medicine at Glasgow University and Director of the Institute of Law Ethics in Medicine.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
palliative medicine, legalised assisted dying, legalise assisted dying, assisted nutrition, assisted death, terminal sedation, voluntary euthanasia, choosing death, current legal position, been legalised, competent choice, physician assisted suicide, letting die, withdrawing treatment
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United Kingdom, Select Committee, Medical Ethics, Oxford University Press, Cambridge University Press, Lord Joffe, Disability Rights Commission, British Medical Journal, Anthony Bland, Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, Suicide Act, Council of Europe, New England Journal of Medicine, Hastings Center Report, Human Rights, National Council, Nuffield Council, New York, Georgetown University Press, Diane Pretty, United States, General Medical Council, Lord Goff, Lord Browne-Wilkinson, Bolam Test
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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