Diane Pretty was an Englishwoman in her early 40s who had been married nearly a quarter of a century. In November 1999, she learned she had amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-in Britain, motor neurone disease. Her condition deteriorated rapidly, and soon she was essentially paralysed from the neck downwards. She had virtually no decipherable speech and was fed by a tube. She was expected to live only a few months or even weeks. AB a court later explained, however, her intellect and capacity to make decisions are unimpaired. The final stages of the disease are exceedingly distressing and undignified. AB she is frightened and distressed at the suffering and indignity that she will endure if the disease runs its course, she very strongly wishe...
Assisted dying remains illegal in England and Wales in spite of several attempts having been made by...
In Washington v. Glucksberg, the Court declined to find a right to physician-assisted suicide ( PAS ...
Debates over end-of-life issues and the “right to die” are becoming increasingly prevalent in many m...
The European Court of Human Rights as well as the British courts dismissed the euthanasia bid by Dia...
The legal position of those who wish to end their own lives with assistance from another person has ...
Until this year, no state or federal appellate court had ever held that there was a right to assiste...
Properly focused, there were two questions before the Supreme Court in Washington v. Glucksberg. Fir...
The author of this monograph analyses the resolutions pronounced by the House of Lords and by the Eu...
On May 14, 2013, the European Court of Human Rights held that the current assisted suicide law in Sw...
For Whom the Bell Tolls, Ernest Hemingway\u27s novel about the Spanish Civil War, ends with its Amer...
this article looks at assisted suicide in the light of the UK government's suicide prevention strate...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Sweet & Maxwell via htt...
A statement by Diane Pretty (2002): who sought and failed to have an assisted death through the Engl...
In most states, patients with terminal, painful, and debilitating conditions have no means of ending...
On the 25th June 2014 the Supreme Court gave its decision in the case of applications for judicial r...
Assisted dying remains illegal in England and Wales in spite of several attempts having been made by...
In Washington v. Glucksberg, the Court declined to find a right to physician-assisted suicide ( PAS ...
Debates over end-of-life issues and the “right to die” are becoming increasingly prevalent in many m...
The European Court of Human Rights as well as the British courts dismissed the euthanasia bid by Dia...
The legal position of those who wish to end their own lives with assistance from another person has ...
Until this year, no state or federal appellate court had ever held that there was a right to assiste...
Properly focused, there were two questions before the Supreme Court in Washington v. Glucksberg. Fir...
The author of this monograph analyses the resolutions pronounced by the House of Lords and by the Eu...
On May 14, 2013, the European Court of Human Rights held that the current assisted suicide law in Sw...
For Whom the Bell Tolls, Ernest Hemingway\u27s novel about the Spanish Civil War, ends with its Amer...
this article looks at assisted suicide in the light of the UK government's suicide prevention strate...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Sweet & Maxwell via htt...
A statement by Diane Pretty (2002): who sought and failed to have an assisted death through the Engl...
In most states, patients with terminal, painful, and debilitating conditions have no means of ending...
On the 25th June 2014 the Supreme Court gave its decision in the case of applications for judicial r...
Assisted dying remains illegal in England and Wales in spite of several attempts having been made by...
In Washington v. Glucksberg, the Court declined to find a right to physician-assisted suicide ( PAS ...
Debates over end-of-life issues and the “right to die” are becoming increasingly prevalent in many m...