Euthanasia and faith-based aged-care organisations: The right not to kill?

AbstractIn this paper we focus on an important specific issue which has not received serious attention in the scholarly literature on euthanasia, namely, that of the coercive imposition (by way of sanction-backed regulations) of the practice of voluntary active euthanasia (in particular) on faith-ba...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Seumas Miller, Virginia Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2023-07-01
Series:Church, Communication and Culture
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23753234.2023.2249513
Description
Summary:AbstractIn this paper we focus on an important specific issue which has not received serious attention in the scholarly literature on euthanasia, namely, that of the coercive imposition (by way of sanction-backed regulations) of the practice of voluntary active euthanasia (in particular) on faith-based, aged-care organizations. In Section 1 we outline the relevant conceptual background drawing on existing literature. In Section 2, we consider two conflicting ethical standpoints on voluntary active euthanasia. In Section 3 we outline the nature and extent of the push to impose the practice of voluntary active euthanasia on Catholic-run aged-care organizations. In Section 4 we argue that the argument for coercively imposing the practice of voluntary active euthanasia on faith-based, aged-care organizations, is not well-made, especially in the context of liberal democracies committed to pluralism.
ISSN:2375-3234
2375-3242