Constitutional Law-IGNORING AN INCOMPETENT PERSON\u27S CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO FORGO LIFE-SUSTAINING TREATMEN
End-of-life decisionmaking is very often accompanied by high stakes and human drama, as evinced in t...
Following the Supreme Court’s unprecedented acceptance of three abortion cases, and for the first ti...
This Comment argues that the Washington legislature should amend Washington law to allow the removal...
Constitutional Law-IGNORING AN INCOMPETENT PERSON\u27S CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO FORGO LIFE-SUSTAINING...
The purposes of this Article are twofold. Our first purpose is to reexamine the legal foundations of...
The United States Supreme Court\u27s landmark decision in Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of...
[...]the majority improperly implied that continued existence and treatment in a persistent vegetati...
In the long-awaited and much-discussed Nancy Cruzan case, a 5-4 Supreme Court majority ruled that ab...
As the law developed in the states, the Supreme Court of the United States, in its 1990 opinion in C...
[T]o call Nancy Cruzan\u27s case a matter of the right to die seems strained, if not contrived. The ...
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that a surrogate decision maker may exercise the right of an adu...
When the U.S. Supreme Court issued its landmark “right to die” decision in Cruzan v. Director, Misso...
This paper will first review the development of Ohio case law prior to the Supreme Court\u27s decisi...
Constitutional Law-FLORIDA\u27S RIGHT TO DIE-A QUESTION OF LITIGATION OR LEGISLATION
In the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Hea...
End-of-life decisionmaking is very often accompanied by high stakes and human drama, as evinced in t...
Following the Supreme Court’s unprecedented acceptance of three abortion cases, and for the first ti...
This Comment argues that the Washington legislature should amend Washington law to allow the removal...
Constitutional Law-IGNORING AN INCOMPETENT PERSON\u27S CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT TO FORGO LIFE-SUSTAINING...
The purposes of this Article are twofold. Our first purpose is to reexamine the legal foundations of...
The United States Supreme Court\u27s landmark decision in Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of...
[...]the majority improperly implied that continued existence and treatment in a persistent vegetati...
In the long-awaited and much-discussed Nancy Cruzan case, a 5-4 Supreme Court majority ruled that ab...
As the law developed in the states, the Supreme Court of the United States, in its 1990 opinion in C...
[T]o call Nancy Cruzan\u27s case a matter of the right to die seems strained, if not contrived. The ...
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that a surrogate decision maker may exercise the right of an adu...
When the U.S. Supreme Court issued its landmark “right to die” decision in Cruzan v. Director, Misso...
This paper will first review the development of Ohio case law prior to the Supreme Court\u27s decisi...
Constitutional Law-FLORIDA\u27S RIGHT TO DIE-A QUESTION OF LITIGATION OR LEGISLATION
In the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Hea...
End-of-life decisionmaking is very often accompanied by high stakes and human drama, as evinced in t...
Following the Supreme Court’s unprecedented acceptance of three abortion cases, and for the first ti...
This Comment argues that the Washington legislature should amend Washington law to allow the removal...