Physician-assisted suicide is gaining prominence in our social consciousness as patients and physicians, legislatures and courts wrestle with how best to resolve the profound differences of opinion regarding its practice. This Comment addresses the legal and structural arguments surrounding whether the decision to permit or prohibit physician- assisted suicide should be made by Congress or by the states
The first part of this Comment will present the historical and theological views towards suicide. Th...
In Washington v. Glucksberg and Vacco v. Quill, the Supreme Court refused to create a constitutional...
The article considers the application of general theories of federalism (e.g., states as laboratorie...
This Article presents the argument that the Fourteenth Amendment protects the individual decision to...
For almost ten years, Oregon stood alone as the state that permits terminally ill persons to choose ...
Despite laws in many states prohibiting assisted suicide, an unknown but significant number of peopl...
Physician-assisted suicide has become the subject of a hotly contested legal and political debate, b...
It has now been ten years since the Supreme Court handed down Glucksberg and Quill, rulings on laws ...
The Pain Relief Promotion Act, as proposed in the 106th Congress, provided that the Attorney General...
This Article examines several aspects of the medical and legal debate on physician-assisted suicide....
This Article is divided into four parts. Part I discusses the history and evolution of the right to...
The United States Supreme Court granted review of two physician-assisted suicide decisions from the ...
Many individuals with mental illness wish to die because the symptoms of their illness are unbearabl...
On November 8, 1994, Oregon voters narrowly passed the highly controversial Death with Dignity Act (...
The United States Supreme Court recently acknowledged that the constitutional right to privacy encom...
The first part of this Comment will present the historical and theological views towards suicide. Th...
In Washington v. Glucksberg and Vacco v. Quill, the Supreme Court refused to create a constitutional...
The article considers the application of general theories of federalism (e.g., states as laboratorie...
This Article presents the argument that the Fourteenth Amendment protects the individual decision to...
For almost ten years, Oregon stood alone as the state that permits terminally ill persons to choose ...
Despite laws in many states prohibiting assisted suicide, an unknown but significant number of peopl...
Physician-assisted suicide has become the subject of a hotly contested legal and political debate, b...
It has now been ten years since the Supreme Court handed down Glucksberg and Quill, rulings on laws ...
The Pain Relief Promotion Act, as proposed in the 106th Congress, provided that the Attorney General...
This Article examines several aspects of the medical and legal debate on physician-assisted suicide....
This Article is divided into four parts. Part I discusses the history and evolution of the right to...
The United States Supreme Court granted review of two physician-assisted suicide decisions from the ...
Many individuals with mental illness wish to die because the symptoms of their illness are unbearabl...
On November 8, 1994, Oregon voters narrowly passed the highly controversial Death with Dignity Act (...
The United States Supreme Court recently acknowledged that the constitutional right to privacy encom...
The first part of this Comment will present the historical and theological views towards suicide. Th...
In Washington v. Glucksberg and Vacco v. Quill, the Supreme Court refused to create a constitutional...
The article considers the application of general theories of federalism (e.g., states as laboratorie...