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Voluntary assisted dying: law? health? justice? / edited by Daniel J. Fleming and David J. Carter

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextCopyright date: ©2021Publisher: [Place of publication not identified] : ANU Press; ANU Press, [date of publication not identified]Description: 1 online resource (1 online resource (vii, 242 pages))Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781760465056
  • 1760465054
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Voluntary assisted dying:DDC classification:
  • 344.9404197 23
LOC classification:
  • KU1531
Online resources:
Contents:
ch.1. The constitution of 'choice': voluntary assisted dying in the Australian state of Victoria / Courtney Hempton -- chapter2. Palliative care as a necropolitical technology / Hamish Robertson and Joanne Travaglia -- chapter3. Supported decision-making: a good idea in principle but we need to consider supporting decisions about voluntary assisted dying / Nola M. Ries and Elise Mansfield -- chapter4. The compassionate state? 'voluntary assisted dying', neoliberalism, and a virtue without an anchor / Daniel J Fleming -- chapter5. The neoliberal rationality of voluntary assisted dying / Marc Trabsky -- chapter6. Over the rainbow bridge: animals and euthanasia / Jessica Ison -- chapter7. A desire unto death: the warnings of Girard and Levinas against the sanitisation of euthanasia / Nigel Zimmermann -- chapter8. Gosport hospital, euthanasia and serial killing / Penny Crofts -- chapter9. A criminal legal biopolitics: the case of voluntary assisted dying / David J Carter
Review: Since the introduction of voluntary assisted dying, a 'new moment' in the governance of life and death has opened up within the Australian context. This new moment demands new questions be asked regarding the regime and its effects in this new era for law, health care and justice. This collection brings together critical perspectives on voluntary assisted dying itself, and on various practices adjacent to it, including questions of state power, population ageing, the differential treatment of human and non-human animals at the time of death, the management of health care processes through silent 'workarounds', and the financialisation of death. This book provides an overview of the first Australian regime, and then introduces these diverse critical views, broadening our engagement with euthanasia and voluntary assisted dying beyond the limited, but important, debates about law reform and its particular enactment in Australia. - Publisher's website.
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Includes bibliographical references.

ch.1. The constitution of 'choice': voluntary assisted dying in the Australian state of Victoria / Courtney Hempton -- chapter2. Palliative care as a necropolitical technology / Hamish Robertson and Joanne Travaglia -- chapter3. Supported decision-making: a good idea in principle but we need to consider supporting decisions about voluntary assisted dying / Nola M. Ries and Elise Mansfield -- chapter4. The compassionate state? 'voluntary assisted dying', neoliberalism, and a virtue without an anchor / Daniel J Fleming -- chapter5. The neoliberal rationality of voluntary assisted dying / Marc Trabsky -- chapter6. Over the rainbow bridge: animals and euthanasia / Jessica Ison -- chapter7. A desire unto death: the warnings of Girard and Levinas against the sanitisation of euthanasia / Nigel Zimmermann -- chapter8. Gosport hospital, euthanasia and serial killing / Penny Crofts -- chapter9. A criminal legal biopolitics: the case of voluntary assisted dying / David J Carter

Since the introduction of voluntary assisted dying, a 'new moment' in the governance of life and death has opened up within the Australian context. This new moment demands new questions be asked regarding the regime and its effects in this new era for law, health care and justice. This collection brings together critical perspectives on voluntary assisted dying itself, and on various practices adjacent to it, including questions of state power, population ageing, the differential treatment of human and non-human animals at the time of death, the management of health care processes through silent 'workarounds', and the financialisation of death. This book provides an overview of the first Australian regime, and then introduces these diverse critical views, broadening our engagement with euthanasia and voluntary assisted dying beyond the limited, but important, debates about law reform and its particular enactment in Australia. - Publisher's website.

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