This article proposes offense-specific guidelines for how prosecutorial discretion should be exercised in cases of voluntary euthanasia and assisted suicide. A similar policy has been produced in England and Wales but we consider it to be deficient in a number of respects, including that it lacks a set of coherent guiding principles. In light of these concerns, we outline an approach to constructing alternative guidelines that begins with identifying three guiding principles that we argue are appropriate for this purpose: respect for autonomy; the need for high-quality prosecutorial decision-making; and the importance of public confidence in that decision-making
This thesis argues that patients with dementia should be given access to physician-assisted suicide ...
Tragic individual cases of human suffering are the key drivers of public and political debate on the...
Suicide poses difficult and foundational problems for the law. Those who most highly value personal ...
This article proposes offence-specific guidelines for how prosecutorial discretion should be exercis...
This thesis examines the subject of assisted dying in the UK. This subject raises complex legal and ...
This article examines the evolution and history of the development of the right-to-die in America, t...
Assisted dying is legally and ethically controversial. This thesis will argue that the Suicide Act 1...
There is an active debate as to whether euthanasia is socially acceptable as a mechanism f...
The policy of assisted dying has developed slowly over many decades in the United States, as it has ...
The aim of this thesis is to reflect the role of care in response to requests for assistance to die....
The paper explores historical positions on suicide and philosophical, theological, and moral positio...
Euthanasia is a deeply personal and multifaceted topic that has become increasingly relevant in cont...
Jurors are subject to many biases that hinder their ability to make objective decisions and nullific...
An Expert Panel of the Royal Society of Canada and a Select Committee of the Québec National Assemb...
This thesis assesses the current status of Canadian prescription drug regulation and the policy driv...
This thesis argues that patients with dementia should be given access to physician-assisted suicide ...
Tragic individual cases of human suffering are the key drivers of public and political debate on the...
Suicide poses difficult and foundational problems for the law. Those who most highly value personal ...
This article proposes offence-specific guidelines for how prosecutorial discretion should be exercis...
This thesis examines the subject of assisted dying in the UK. This subject raises complex legal and ...
This article examines the evolution and history of the development of the right-to-die in America, t...
Assisted dying is legally and ethically controversial. This thesis will argue that the Suicide Act 1...
There is an active debate as to whether euthanasia is socially acceptable as a mechanism f...
The policy of assisted dying has developed slowly over many decades in the United States, as it has ...
The aim of this thesis is to reflect the role of care in response to requests for assistance to die....
The paper explores historical positions on suicide and philosophical, theological, and moral positio...
Euthanasia is a deeply personal and multifaceted topic that has become increasingly relevant in cont...
Jurors are subject to many biases that hinder their ability to make objective decisions and nullific...
An Expert Panel of the Royal Society of Canada and a Select Committee of the Québec National Assemb...
This thesis assesses the current status of Canadian prescription drug regulation and the policy driv...
This thesis argues that patients with dementia should be given access to physician-assisted suicide ...
Tragic individual cases of human suffering are the key drivers of public and political debate on the...
Suicide poses difficult and foundational problems for the law. Those who most highly value personal ...