- Melbourne Law School - Research Publications
Melbourne Law School - Research Publications
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ItemMore helpful advice IIIPark, Malcolm McKenzie (The Victorian Bar, 1995)Yet another collection of legal anecdotes involving bold, insouciant, or impudent behaviour by counsel directed towards the court, the judicial officer, or the practice of law.
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ItemMore helpful advice IIPark, Malcolm McKenzie (The Victorian Bar, 1994)An even further collection of legal anecdotes involving bold, insouciant, or impudent behaviour by counsel directed towards the court, the judicial officer, or the practice of law.
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ItemMore helpful advicePark, Malcolm McKenzie ( 1994)A further collection of anecdotes involving bold, insouciant, or impudent behaviour by counsel directed towards the court, the judicial officer, or the practice of law.
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ItemThe Schiavo and Korp cases: Conceptualising end-of-life decision makingSKENE, LOANE (Law Book Co., 2005)An incompetent, terminally ill patient can be viewed in two ways – as a person who is dying, when futile, life-prolonging treatment can be lawfully withdrawn; or a person with a disability, for whom a guardian must be appointed to decide about treatment. Terri Schiavo’s husband took the first view and her parents the second. Maria Korp was regarded as dying when treatment was withdrawn. The difference in conceptualising a patient’s situation is critical. Where a patient is dying, treatment can be lawfully withdrawn whatever the view of the relatives; they cannot require treatment to be continued. Where a patient has a disability and a surrogate decision maker is appointed, the focus is on what the patient would have wanted in such circumstances, so that the surrogate can act in accordance with the patient’s wishes. That deflects attention from the fundamental legal principle that whatever a patient or the relatives want, they are not legally entitled to demand treatment that doctors consider futile in the circumstances.
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ItemUndertaking research in other countries: National ethico-legal barometers and international ethical consensus statementsSkene, L (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2007-02-01)Is it ethical for scientists to conduct or to benefit from research in another country if that research would be unlawful, or not generally accepted, in their own country?