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Assisted Suicide in Canada: Moral, Legal, and Policy Considerations
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Assisted Suicide in Canada: Moral, Legal, and Policy Considerations in Franklin, TN
Current price: $35.95

Barnes and Noble
Assisted Suicide in Canada: Moral, Legal, and Policy Considerations in Franklin, TN
Current price: $35.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
An ethical, legal, and political guide to the future of assisted suicide in Canada.
In its 2015
Carter vs. Canada
decision, the Canadian Supreme Court decriminalized assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia. As the public debate continues,
Assisted Suicide in Canada
offers an accessible but nuanced survey of the controversial ruling’s ethical, legal, and political contoursincluding its judicial precedents and subsequent legislation. Contending that
will alter our relationship to life, death, and medicine for generations, Travis Dumsday offers an essential guide through lingering uncertainties, including how to safeguard both medical professionals’ and taxpayers’ freedom of conscience.
In its 2015
Carter vs. Canada
decision, the Canadian Supreme Court decriminalized assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia. As the public debate continues,
Assisted Suicide in Canada
offers an accessible but nuanced survey of the controversial ruling’s ethical, legal, and political contoursincluding its judicial precedents and subsequent legislation. Contending that
will alter our relationship to life, death, and medicine for generations, Travis Dumsday offers an essential guide through lingering uncertainties, including how to safeguard both medical professionals’ and taxpayers’ freedom of conscience.
An ethical, legal, and political guide to the future of assisted suicide in Canada.
In its 2015
Carter vs. Canada
decision, the Canadian Supreme Court decriminalized assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia. As the public debate continues,
Assisted Suicide in Canada
offers an accessible but nuanced survey of the controversial ruling’s ethical, legal, and political contoursincluding its judicial precedents and subsequent legislation. Contending that
will alter our relationship to life, death, and medicine for generations, Travis Dumsday offers an essential guide through lingering uncertainties, including how to safeguard both medical professionals’ and taxpayers’ freedom of conscience.
In its 2015
Carter vs. Canada
decision, the Canadian Supreme Court decriminalized assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia. As the public debate continues,
Assisted Suicide in Canada
offers an accessible but nuanced survey of the controversial ruling’s ethical, legal, and political contoursincluding its judicial precedents and subsequent legislation. Contending that
will alter our relationship to life, death, and medicine for generations, Travis Dumsday offers an essential guide through lingering uncertainties, including how to safeguard both medical professionals’ and taxpayers’ freedom of conscience.