Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- For Emma Victoria, and Mélisande ‘Millie’ Ottoline, and Lily Jorja
- Foreword
- General Editor's Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- 1 An Ill-Suited and Inappropriate Union? Exploring the Relationship Between the Criminal Justice System and Health Care
- 2 Criminalizing Medical Malpractice
- 3 Medical Manslaughter: The Rise (and Replacement) of a Contested Crime?
- 4 Medical or Managerial Manslaughter?
- 5 When Are Errors a Crime?—Lessons from New Zealand
- 6 Euthanasia and the Defence of Necessity: Advocating a More Appropriate Legal Response*
- 7 Criminal Law is the Problem, Not the Solution
- 8 Lessons in Legal and Judicial Ethics From <i>Schiavo</i>: The Special Responsibilities of Lawyers and Judges in Cases Involving Persons with Severe Cognitive Disabilities
- 9 Medical Treatment at the End of Life—A British Doctor's Perspective
- 10 Dignity: The Difference Between Abortion and Neonaticide for Severe Disability
- 11 Terminating Life and Human Rights: The Fetus and the Neonate
- 12 Non-treatment of Severely Disabled Newborns and Criminal Liability Under Spanish Law<sup>1</sup>
- 13 Should We Criminalize HIV Transmission?
- 14 The Rightful Domain of the Criminal Law
- 15 Medicalizing Crime—Criminalizing Health? The Role of Law
- INDEX
(p.xi) Acknowledgements
(p.xi) Acknowledgements
- Source:
- The Criminal Justice System and Health Care
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
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- Title Pages
- For Emma Victoria, and Mélisande ‘Millie’ Ottoline, and Lily Jorja
- Foreword
- General Editor's Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Contributors
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- 1 An Ill-Suited and Inappropriate Union? Exploring the Relationship Between the Criminal Justice System and Health Care
- 2 Criminalizing Medical Malpractice
- 3 Medical Manslaughter: The Rise (and Replacement) of a Contested Crime?
- 4 Medical or Managerial Manslaughter?
- 5 When Are Errors a Crime?—Lessons from New Zealand
- 6 Euthanasia and the Defence of Necessity: Advocating a More Appropriate Legal Response*
- 7 Criminal Law is the Problem, Not the Solution
- 8 Lessons in Legal and Judicial Ethics From <i>Schiavo</i>: The Special Responsibilities of Lawyers and Judges in Cases Involving Persons with Severe Cognitive Disabilities
- 9 Medical Treatment at the End of Life—A British Doctor's Perspective
- 10 Dignity: The Difference Between Abortion and Neonaticide for Severe Disability
- 11 Terminating Life and Human Rights: The Fetus and the Neonate
- 12 Non-treatment of Severely Disabled Newborns and Criminal Liability Under Spanish Law<sup>1</sup>
- 13 Should We Criminalize HIV Transmission?
- 14 The Rightful Domain of the Criminal Law
- 15 Medicalizing Crime—Criminalizing Health? The Role of Law
- INDEX