Are you alive? What makes you so sure? Most people believe this
question has a clear answer that some law defines our status as
living (or not) for all purposes. But they are dead wrong. In this
pioneering study, Elizabeth Price Foley examines the many, and
surprisingly ambiguous, legal definitions of what counts as human
life and death.
Foley reveals that not being dead is not necessarily the same as
being alive, in the eyes of the law. People, pre-viable fetuses,
and post-viable fetuses have different sets of legal rights, which
explains the law's seemingly inconsistent approach to stem cell
research, in vitro fertilization, frozen embryos, in utero embryos,
contraception, abortion, homicide, and wrongful death.
In a detailed analysis that is sure to be controversial, Foley
shows how the need for more organ transplants and the need to
conserve health care resources are exerting steady pressure to
expand the legal definition of death. As a result, death is being
declared faster than ever before. The "right to die," Foley
worries, may be morphing slowly into an obligation to die.
Foley s balanced, accessible chapters explore the most
contentious legal issues of our time including cryogenics,
feticide, abortion, physician-assisted suicide, brain death,
vegetative and minimally conscious states, informed consent, and
advance directives across constitutional, contract, tort, property,
and criminal law. Ultimately, she suggests, the inconsistencies and
ambiguities in U.S. laws governing life and death may be
culturally, and perhaps even psychologically, necessary for an
enormous and diverse country like ours.
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