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BIOETHICS, MEDICINE AND THE CRIMINAL LAW Bioethics, medicine and the criminal law. - [Cambridge] : Cambridge University Press, [copy. 2014]. - 3 vols. ; 24 cm. - (Cambridge bioethics and law) Vol. 1: The criminal law and bioethical conflict : walking the tightrope / edited by Amel Alghrani, Rebecca Bennett, and Suzanne Ost. – [Cambridge] : Cambridge University Press, [copy. 2013]. – XVI, 290 p. ; 24 cm. – (Cambridge bioethics and law). – ISBN 978-1-107-02512-7. ; Vol. 2: Medicine, crime and society / edited by Daniel Griffiths, and Andrew Sanders. – [Cambridge] : Cambridge University Press, [copy. 2013]. – XX, 332 p. ; 24 cm. – (Cambridge bioethics and law). – ISBN 978-1-107-02153-2. ; Vol. 3: Medicine and bioethics in the theatre of the criminal process / Margaret Brazier, and Suzanne Ost. – [Cambridge] : Cambridge University Press, [copy. 2013]. – XVIII, 291 p. ; 24 cm. – (Cambridge bioethics and law). – ISBN 978-1-107-01825-9. (Encad.) : compra MEDICINA, BIOÉTICA, DIREITO PENAL, EUTANÁSIA, DIREITO À MORTE EM DIGNIDADE, MORTE ASSISTIDA, VÍRUS HIV, RELAÇÃO MÉDICO-PACIENTE, BIOTECNOLOGIA, TRANSPLANTE DE ÓRGÃOS, DIGNIDADE DA PESSOA HUMANA, SAÚDE PÚBLICA, NEGLIGÊNCIA MÉDICA, ERRO MÉDICO, REABILITAÇÃO, CONTAMINAÇÃO, CRIME DOLOSO, CRIME POR NEGLIGÊNCIA 1.v.: THE CRIMINAL LAW AND BIOETHICAL CONFLICT: WALKING THE TIGHTROPE. 1- Introduction – when criminal law encounters bioethics: a case of tensions and incompatibilities or an apt forum for resolving ethical conflict? / Amel Alghrani, Rebecca Bennett, Suzanne Ost. PART I: DEATH, DYING, AND THE CRIMINAL LAW. 2- Euthanasia and assisted suicide should, when properly performed by a doctor in an appropriate case, be decriminalised / John Griffiths. 3- Five flawed arguments for decriminalising euthanasia / John Keown. 4- Euthanasia excused: between prohibition and permission / Richard Huxtable. PART II: FREEDOM AND AUTONOMY: WHEN CONSENT IS NOT ENOUGH. 5- Body integrity identity disorder – a problem of perception? / Robert Smith. 6- Risky sex and 'manly diversions': contours of consent in HIV transmission and rough horseplay cases / David Gurnham. 7- 'Consensual' sexual activity between doctors and patients: a matter for the criminal law? / Suzanne Ost, Hazel Biggs. PART III: CRIMINALISING BIOMEDICAL SCIENCE. 8- 'Scientists in the dock': regulating science / Amel Alghrani, Sarah Chan. 9- Bioethical conflict and developing biotechnologies: is protecting individual and public health from the risks of xenotransplantation a matter for the (criminal) law? / Sara Fovargue. 10- The criminal law and enhancement – none of the law's business? / Nishat Hyder, John Harris. 11- Dignity as a socially constructed value / Stephen Smith. PART IV: BIOETHICS AND CRIMINAL LAW IN THE DOCK. 12- Can English law accommodate moral controversy in medicine? The case of abortion / Margaret Brazier. 13- The case for decriminalising abortion in Northern Ireland / Marie Fox. 14. The impact of the loss of deference towards the medical profession / José Miola. 15- Criminalising medical negligence / David Archard. 16- All to the good? Criminality, politics, and public health / John Coggon. 17- Moral controversy, human rights and the common law judge / Brenda Hale. - 2.v.: MEDICINE, CRIME AND SOCIETY. Foreword / Peter Skegg. 1- Introduction / Danielle Griffiths, Andrew Sanders. PART I: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES. 2- Healthcare seial killings: was the case of Dr Harold Shipman unthinkable? / Brian Hurwitz. 3- 'The sleep of death': anaesthesia, mortality and the courts from ether to Adomako / Barry Lyons. 4- Getting mixed up in crime: doctors, disease transmission, confidentiality and the criminal processb / James Chalmers. PART II: CRIMINAL ERRORS. 5- Victims' voices, victims' interests and criminal justice in the healthcare setting / Andrew Sanders. 6- Medical manslaughter and expert evidence: the roles of context and character / Oliver Quick. 7- The road to the dock: prosecution decision-making in medical manslaughter cases / Danielle Griffiths, Andrew Sanders. 8- Psychiatric care and criminal prosecution / Neil Allen. PART III: ORGANISATIONAL PERSPECTIVES. 9- Involuntary automaticity and medical manslaughter / Peter Gooderham, Brian Toft. 10- Medical manslaughter: organisational liability / Celia Wells. 11- The Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 and maternal death: an opportunity to address systemic deficiencies in maternity services? / Penelope J. Brearey-Horne. PART IV: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES. 12- From prosecution to rehabilitation: New Zealand's response to health practitioner negligence / Ron Paterson. 13- Doctors who kill and harm their patients: the Australian experience / Ian Dobinson. 14- The role of the criminal law in healthcare malpractice in France: examining the HIV blood contamination scandal / Anne-Marie Farrell, Melinee Kazarian. 15- The use and impact of the criminal process on the treatment of pain in the USA / Stephen J. Ziegler. 16- Exploring the tension between physician-assisted dying and palliative medicine / Alexandra Mullock. - 3.v.: MEDICINE AND BIOETHICS IN THE THEATRE OF THE CRIMINAL PROCESS. Introduction. 1- Courtrooms, 'physic' and drama. 2- Crime, doctors and the body (politic). 3- From the 'theatre' to the dock. 4- Protecting life before birth. 5- Medical (and non-medical) ending of life. 6- Which twin lives? 7- Drawing connections: morality, political liberalism, responsibility and interpretation. 8- Parallels and disconnects: principlism in bioethics, principles of criminalisation and the rule of law. Conclusion. |