Medical Technology, Terminal Care and Criminal Law: Court Cases from Japan

Author(s):  
Yuji Shiroshita
1980 ◽  
Vol 136 (6) ◽  
pp. 525-532 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Wootton

I am indeed sensible of the honour which you have conferred upon me, first, by including me among the honorary Fellows of the Royal College, and further by inviting me to deliver the 1979 Maudsley lecture. Equally am I conscious of my conspicuous lack of qualifications for these honours. My original university degree was in economics, a subject which hardly impinges upon psychiatry. My interest in your profession derives primarily from 44 years' experience as a magistrate (more often than not presiding) in London adult or juvenile courts, and, secondarily, from service as the former head of a University Department training social workers. Through these experiences I have not only had contacts with numerous psychiatrists about court cases and students, but have also got to know many of them personally, both at home and abroad. In this country my particular friends were the late Aubrey Lewis and our much beloved Peter Scott whose premature death has left a gap which many of us feel can never be filled. But I stand before you as a layman without any relevant professional qualification.


2010 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 319-329
Author(s):  
Volker Krey ◽  
Jan Stenger ◽  
Oliver Windgätter ◽  
Thomas Roggenfelder

“Should bankers be publicly hanged for what they have done?” During a visit to Abu Dhabi in March 2009, the author came upon this sarcastic question while reading the well-known United Arab Emirates' journal “The National.” The aforesaid question was part of an interview with Paul Koster, chief executive of the Dubai Financial Services Authority, concerning the financial crisis. He answered in the negative by saying, “There will be court cases, but public hanging is a bit extreme.” His statement has, in a way, anticipated the result of the paper at hand: There should be criminal proceedings in Germany as well; however, they should not result in draconian criminal consequences.


2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (2) ◽  
pp. 342-374 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Chloe Romanis

Abstract It is frequently claimed that artificial wombs (AWs) could alleviate the burdens placed exclusively on women in reproduction. In this article, I demonstrate how AWs used for the partial gestation of preterm neonates could introduce new choices for women by changing perceptions of tolerable risks in gestation. In light of advancing medical technology, it is necessary to consider whether the current legal framework in England and Wales would support increased choice for women about alternative forms of gestation. I examine the ill-defined offence of ‘unlawfully procuring miscarriage’ in the Offences Against the Person Act 1861 and demonstrate that different conclusions about the legal significance of ending a pregnancy are evident, depending on the analytical lens adopted in interpreting ambiguities. Furthermore, I demonstrate that the defences available to pregnancy termination under the Abortion Act 1967 are too narrow to support choices about alternative forms of gestation, even if they become physically and medically possible. Therefore, we should decriminalise termination of pregnancy, or, if it is assumed that gestation is the business of the criminal law, specific reforms to the legal framework are necessary. The offence of unlawfully procuring miscarriage is too uncertain and broad, and the defences available are too restrictive.


Author(s):  
Mark R. Fondacaro

A recent string of Supreme Court cases now ensures that fewer juveniles will be subjected to our most extreme punitive sanctions, a sign of forward movement toward evolving standards of decency in our culture and jurisprudence. However, this article will argue that there are potential long-term costs associated with the interpretation of developmental differences research relied upon by the Court, not only to juveniles and adults accused and convicted of serious crimes, but to the credibility of science and the legitimacy of the criminal law. The article draws on cutting-edge scientific research to argue that juveniles should indeed be treated differently than we currently treat adults for criminal offenses. However, the primary reason we should treat them differently is not because they are developmentally immature (which many of them may indeed be), but because our retributive justifications for adult punishment do not and will not stand up to scientific scrutiny and the ongoing, inevitable advances in the behavioral and biological sciences. Adolescent immaturity is just one example of the growing number of diminished capacities taking aim at the legitimacy of retributive justifications for punishment. As philosophical and commonsense explanations for criminal behavior give way to scientific and empirical analyses across biological, psychological, and social levels, the justification for and responses to criminal responsibility will need to shift from retribution and just desert toward more forward-looking, consequentialist approaches with both juveniles and adults.


2014 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 433-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanan Zhang

Purpose – The purpose of this paper mainly is to examine the relevant rules concerning documentary letter of credit (L/C) fraud under criminal law in England and China. Design/methodology/approach – The paper analyses the regulations about such crime and relevant literature. Findings – The similarities and differences of such rules have been identified briefly. L/C fraud is considered a conduct crime; and unspecific or vague provisions concerning this crime may cause difficulties of application in judicial practice in both England and China. But the possible punishment for L/C fraud criminals under Chinese criminal law seems more severe than that under English law. Dealing with L/C fraud in international trade under national criminal laws is not effective. Regional and international efforts on legal assistance in cross-border criminal cases still remain to be improved. Research limitations/implications – The limitation is that it examines merely relevant substantial rules in legislation. This opens the paths to future research on the approach towards L/C fraud demonstrated in court cases in England and in China. Social implications – The research underlies the need to take serious attitude and make more effective efforts towards cross-border criminal cases, although different countries may have different rules concerning specific economic crimes. Originality/value – This paper fills the gap of a comparative study on how L/C is regulated under criminal law regime in England and China.


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