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This book explores the social, ethical and legal implications of
assisted reproductive technologies (ART). Providing a comparative
analysis of several European countries, the authors evaluate the
varied approaches to the application of ART throughout Europe. From
a global perspective, countries take very different approaches to
the regulation of ART. Countries apply restrictions to the access
criteria for these treatments and/or direct restrictions to the
practice of the techniques themselves. To understand these varied
approaches to ART practice and regulation, it is necessary to
understand the societal and political background from which they
emerged. This book therefore consists of case studies from eight
European countries which provide insights into the status and
development of the regulation of ART in the last 40 years. The
country cases from all over Europe and the three comparative
chapters provide insights into the diversity of current ART
regulation across the continent as well as into similarities,
differences and trends in this regulatory area. This book will be
of interest to practitioners of ART who are interested in
understanding the differences in regulation of ART in Europe, as
well as long-term trends in this respect. Given the ethical and
legal implications the book explores, it will also be of interest
to students or researchers in the fields of social sciences,
humanities and law.
This book is a successor to J Griffiths, A Bood and H Weyers,
Euthanasia and Law in the Netherlands (Amsterdam University Press
1998) which was widely praised for its thoroughness, clarity, and
accuracy. The new book emphasises recent legal developments and new
research, and has been expanded to include a full treatment of
Belgium, where since 2002 euthanasia has also become legal. The
book also includes descriptions written by local specialists of the
legal situation and what is known about actual practice in a number
of other European countries (England and Wales, France, Italy,
Scandinavia, Spain, Switzerland). The book strives for as complete
and dispassionate a description of the situation as possible. It
covers in detail: - the substantive law applicable to euthanasia,
physician-assisted suicide, withholding and withdrawing treatment,
use of pain relief in potentially lethal doses, palliative and
terminal sedation, and termination of life without a request (in
particular in the case of newborn babies); -the process of legal
development that has led to the current state of the law; -the
system of legal control and its operation in practice; -the results
of empirical research concerning actual medical practice. A
concluding part deals with some general questions that arise out of
the material presented: Is the legalisation of euthanasia an
example of the decline of law or should it, on the contrary, be
seen as part and parcel of the increasing juridification of the
doctor-patient relationship? Does the Dutch experience with
legalised euthanasia support the idea of a 'slippery slope' toward
a situation in which life-especially of the more vulnerable members
of society-is less effectively protected? Is it possible to explain
and to predict when a society will decide to legalise euthanasia?
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