Fr. 140.00

Suicide and the Law

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext The book is a stimulating and elegantly written work, covering a very wide range within a relatively short compass … it will challenge practising lawyers who have any involvement in these areas, and will hopefully also make its way before the Health and Social Care Select Committee of the Westminster Parliament as it grapples at the moment with its inquiry into assisted dying / assisted suicide. Informationen zum Autor Elizabeth Wicks is a Professor of Human Rights Law at the University of Leicester, UK. Klappentext This book investigates the law's approach to suicide in England and Wales. It explores the seismic shift in perceptions of the law's role in respect of suicide from imprisonment as a punishment for attempting suicide, to courts hearing arguments about whether there is not only a right to suicide but also a right to assistance in suicide. This development stands alongside a global recognition of suicide prevention as a public health priority. In this book, the dual priorities of respect for autonomy and the protection of human life are recognised as equally important and the legal issues surrounding suicide in a range of different contemporary contexts, including suicide in prison and juvenile suicide, are considered. The book also investigates what the relationship between mental health and suicide means for its legal regulation, and evaluates the enduring legal offence of assisted suicide, particularly in the context of the terminally ill. It is argued that a more refined approach to the topic of voluntary death should be recognised in the law; one that distinguishes more clearly between autonomous decision-making about the end of life, and incapacitated self-caused risks to life that require effective preventative interventions. Vorwort This book investigates the complex relationship between suicide and the law by means of a normative process of doctrinal analysis, while utilising a historical and socio-legal perspective Zusammenfassung This book investigates the law’s approach to suicide in England and Wales. It explores the seismic shift in perceptions of the law’s role in respect of suicide from imprisonment as a punishment for attempting suicide, to courts hearing arguments about whether there is not only a right to suicide but also a right to assistance in suicide. This development stands alongside a global recognition of suicide prevention as a public health priority. In this book, the dual priorities of respect for autonomy and the protection of human life are recognised as equally important and the legal issues surrounding suicide in a range of different contemporary contexts, including suicide in prison and juvenile suicide, are considered. The book also investigates what the relationship between mental health and suicide means for its legal regulation, and evaluates the enduring legal offence of assisted suicide, particularly in the context of the terminally ill. It is argued that a more refined approach to the topic of voluntary death should be recognised in the law; one that distinguishes more clearly between autonomous decision-making about the end of life, and incapacitated self-caused risks to life that require effective preventative interventions. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Suicide: Definitions and Conceptual Approaches I. Defining Suicide A. Why Define? B. Self-caused Death C. An Intention to Die II. Different Conceptions of Suicide A. The Moralistic View B. The Sociological View C. The Medical Model D. The Rights View E. The Consequentialist View III. Conclusion 2. The History of the Law against Suicide I. Historical Background II. Punishment of Suicide in English Law III. The Insanity Exception A. The Pivotal Role of Coroner’s Juries B. Life Insurance Suicide Exclusion Clauses IV. The Nineteenth-century Removal of the Penalties for Suicide V. The Development of the Offence of A...

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