First Nations Perspectives in Law-Making About Voluntary Assisted Dying.

IF 0.6 Q2 LAW
Journal of Law and Medicine Pub Date : 2022-12-01
Sophie Lewis, Lindy Willmott, Ben P White, Camille La Brooy, Paul Komesaroff
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Voluntary assisted dying laws have now been enacted in all six Australian States with reform being considered in the remaining two. While there is an emerging body of literature examining various aspects of regulation, there has been scant consideration of what these reforms mean for First Nations peoples, and to what extent their experiences have been considered in the process of developing legislation. This article provides a critical analysis of how Indigenous perspectives both contributed to, and were engaged with, during the law reform processes in Victoria and Western Australia, the first two States to grapple with this topic. Findings reveal the sophistication in how Indigenous organisations and individuals engaged with this issue and highlight the critical importance of not universalising Indigenous perspectives. Significantly, there was much greater engagement with Indigenous views in Western Australia than in Victoria. We conclude by considering how Indigenous voices can meaningfully influence Australian law reform processes.

自愿协助死亡立法中的原住民视角。
自愿协助死亡法现已在澳大利亚所有六个州颁布,其余两个州正在考虑进行改革。虽然有越来越多的文献研究监管的各个方面,但很少考虑这些改革对第一民族的意义,以及在制定立法的过程中考虑到他们的经验的程度。本文批判性地分析了土著观点如何在维多利亚州和西澳大利亚州的法律改革进程中做出贡献,并参与其中,这两个州是最早努力解决这一问题的两个州。调查结果揭示了土著组织和个人如何参与这一问题的复杂性,并强调了不普及土著观点的至关重要性。值得注意的是,与维多利亚州相比,西澳大利亚州更多地听取了土著居民的意见。最后,我们考虑了土著的声音如何对澳大利亚的法律改革进程产生有意义的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
63
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