Thứ Tư, 8 tháng 1, 2014

Just Published: Freedom of Choice at the End of Life: Patients’ Rights in a Shifting Legal and Political Landscape

The New York Law School Law Review has just published a new issue:  "Freedom of Choice at the End of Life: Patients’ Rights in a Shifting Legal and Political Landscape" Volume 58, Issue 2 (2013-2014).



The issue is based on the Freedom of Choice at the End of Life: Patients’ Rights in a Shifting Legal and Policy Landscape symposium held at New York Law School in November, 2012.  The symposium was co-sponsored by the Justice Action Center at New York Law School.  Videorecordings of the symposium panels are available here.  Photos from the event are available here. Click here to view videorecordings of the event in iTunes.




  • Introduction by Peter J. Strauss

  • Right-to-Die Cases: A New York Historical Perspective by Sol Wachtler

  • From Schiavo to Death Panels: How Media Coverage of End-of-Life Issues Affects Public Opinion by Sherrie Dulworth

  • Health Justice Denied or Delayed at the End of Life: A Crisis Needing Remedial Action by David C. Leven

  • Advance Directives, Dementia, and Eligibility for Physician-Assisted Death by Paul T. Menzel

  • The Limits of Autonomy: Force-Feedings in Catholic Hospitals and in Prisons by Ann Neumann

  • Context Matters: Disability, the End of Life, and Why the Conversation Is Still So Difficult by Alicia Ouellette

  • Dispute Resolution Mechanisms for Intractable Medical Futility Disputes by Thaddeus Mason Pope

  • A New Life for Wrongful Living by Nadia N. Sawicki

  • Give Me Liberty at My Death: Expanding End-of-Life Choice in Massachusetts by Kathryn L. Tucker





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