Law, religion, and health in the United States
"While the law can create conflict between religion and health, it can also facilitate religious accommodation and protection of conscience. Finding this balance is critical to addressing the most pressing questions at the intersection of law, religion, and health in the United States: should p...
Otros Autores: | , , |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York, NY, USA :
Cambridge University Press
2017.
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Colección: | CUP ebooks.
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Acceso en línea: | Conectar con la versión electrónica |
Ver en Universidad de Navarra: | https://innopac.unav.es/record=b3982472x*spi |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Foreword / Martha Minow
- Introduction: Law, religion, and health in the United States / Elizabeth Sepper, Holly Fernandez Lynch, and I. Glenn Cohen
- Religious liberty, health care, and the culture wars / Douglas Laycock
- From Smith to Hobby Lobby : the transformation of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act / Diane L. Moore and Eric M. Stephen
- The HHS mandate litigation and religious health care providers / Adèle Keim
- Not your father's religious exemptions : the contraceptive-coverage litigation and the rights of others / Gregory M. Lipper
- Recent applications of the Supreme Court's hands-off approach to religious doctrine : from Hosanna-Tabor and Holt to Hobby Lobby and Zubik / Samuel J. Levine
- A corporation's exercise of religion : a practitioner's experience / Melanie Di Pietro
- The natural person as the limiting principle for conscience : can a corporation have a conscience if it doesn't have an intellect and will? / Ryan Meade
- Contracting religion / Elizabeth Sepper
- Mission integrity matters : balancing Catholic health care values and public mandates / David M. Craig
- Religious exemptions to the individual mandate : Health Care Sharing Ministries and the Affordable Care Act / Rachel E. Sachs
- Bosses in the bedroom : religious employers and the future of employer-sponsored health care / Holly Fernandez Lynch and Gregory Curfman
- Religious outliers : professional knowledge communities, individual conscience claims, and the availability of professional services to the public / Claudia E. Haupt
- A common law duty to disclose conscience-based limitations on medical practice / Nadia N. Sawicki
- Conscientious objection, complicity, and accommodation / Amy J. Sepinwall
- How much may religious accommodations burden others? / Nelson Tebbe, Micah Schwatzman and Richard Schragger
- A patchwork array of theocratic fiefdoms?' : RFRA claims against ACA's contraception mandate as examples of the new feudalism / Mary Anne Case
- Unpacking the relationship between conscience and access / Robin Fretwell Wilson
- Religious convictions about homosexuality and the training of counseling professionals : how should we treat religious-based opposition to counseling about same-sex relationships? / Susan J. Stabile
- Reclaiming biopolitics : religion and psychiatry in the sexual orientation change therapy cases and the establishment clause defense / Craig J. Konnoth
- Brain death rejected : expanding legal duties to accommodate religious objections / Thaddeus Mason Pope
- Accommodating miracles : medical futility and religious free exercise / Teneille R. Brown
- Putting the insanity defense on trial : understanding criminality in the context of religion and mental illness / Abbas Rattani and Jemen Amin Derbali
- Religion as a controlling interference in medical decision-making by minors / Jonathan F. Will
- Regulating reasons : governmental regulation of private deliberation in reproductive decision-making / B. Jessie Hill
- Religion and reproductive technology / I. Glenn Cohen
- Religion and the unborn under the First Amendment / Dov Fox
- Race, religion, and masculinity : the HIV double bind / Michele Goodwin
- The intersection of law, religion, and infectious disease in the handling and disposition of human remains / Aileen Maria Marty, Elena Maria Marty-Nelson, and Eloisa C. Rodriguez-Dod
- When religion pollutes : how should law respond when religious practice threatens public health? / Jay Wexler.