TY - BOOK
T1 - Posthumous interests : legal and ethical perspectives / Daniel Sperling
AU - Sperling, Daniel
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - Daniel Sperling discusses the legal status of posthumous interests and their possible defeat by actions performed following the death of a person. The author first explores the following questions: Do the dead have interests and/or rights, the defeat of which may constitute harm? What does posthumous harm consist of and when does it occur, if at all? This is followed by a more detailed analysis of three categories of posthumous interests arising in the medico-legal context: the proprietary interest in the body of the deceased, the testamentary interest in determining the disposal of one’s body after death and the interest in post-mortem medical confidentiality. Sperling concludes that if we acknowledge the interest in one’s symbolic existence and legally protect it, not only do some interests survive a person’s death but we should also enjoy a peremptory legal power to shape in advance our symbolic existence after death. • This is the first book to analyse the concept of posthumous interests with its emphasis on three under-regulated and incoherent legal areas • It is written by a lawyer and philosopher whose training is in the area of bioethics and medical law • Provides a thorough analysis of an area which by its nature evokes intuitive responses, subjectivity and sentimentalism occasionally reflected in case law
AB - Daniel Sperling discusses the legal status of posthumous interests and their possible defeat by actions performed following the death of a person. The author first explores the following questions: Do the dead have interests and/or rights, the defeat of which may constitute harm? What does posthumous harm consist of and when does it occur, if at all? This is followed by a more detailed analysis of three categories of posthumous interests arising in the medico-legal context: the proprietary interest in the body of the deceased, the testamentary interest in determining the disposal of one’s body after death and the interest in post-mortem medical confidentiality. Sperling concludes that if we acknowledge the interest in one’s symbolic existence and legally protect it, not only do some interests survive a person’s death but we should also enjoy a peremptory legal power to shape in advance our symbolic existence after death. • This is the first book to analyse the concept of posthumous interests with its emphasis on three under-regulated and incoherent legal areas • It is written by a lawyer and philosopher whose training is in the area of bioethics and medical law • Provides a thorough analysis of an area which by its nature evokes intuitive responses, subjectivity and sentimentalism occasionally reflected in case law
KW - Wills
UR - https://haifa-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/f/1ch98gv/972HAI_MAIN_ALMA2180078170002791
M3 - Book
SN - 9780521877848
T3 - Cambridge law, medicine, and ethics lat
BT - Posthumous interests : legal and ethical perspectives / Daniel Sperling
PB - Cambridge University Press
CY - Cambridge
ER -