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E-grāmata: Law and the Dead

(Queen's University Belfast, UK)
  • Formāts: 298 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Apr-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317964339
  • Formāts - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formāts: 298 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 14-Apr-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317964339

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The fate of the dead is a compelling and emotive subject, which also raises increasingly complex legal questions. This book focuses on the substantive laws around disposal of the recently deceased and associated issues around their post-mortem fate. It looks primarily at the laws in England and Wales but also offers a comparative approach, drawing heavily on material from other common law jurisdictions including Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the United States.

The book provides an in-depth, contextual and comparative analysis of the substantive laws and policy issues around corpse disposal, exhumation and the posthumous treatment of the dead, including commemoration. Topics covered include: the legal frameworks around burial, cremation and other disposal methods; the hierarchy of persons who have a legal duty to dispose of the dead and who are entitled to possession of the deceaseds remains; offences against the dead; family burial disputes, and the legal status of burial instructions; the posthumous use of donated bodily material; and the rules around disinterment, and creating an appropriate memorial. A key theme of the book will be to look at the manner in which conflicts involving the dead are becoming increasingly common in secular, multi-cultural societies where the traditional nuclear family model is no longer the norm, and how such legal contests are resolved by courts.

As the first comprehensive survey of the laws in this area for decades, this book will be of use to academics, lawyers and judges adjudicating on issues around the fate of the dead, as well as the death industry and funeral service providers.
Foreword xi
Preface xiii
Table of cases
xv
Table of statutes
xxvii
Introduction 1(8)
1 Death and its immediate aftermath
9(17)
Introduction
9(1)
I The legal definition of `death'
9(2)
II Organ donation
11(1)
III Documenting death
11(2)
IV Suspicious and unexplained deaths: The coroner's jurisdiction
13(7)
V Facilitating disposal: Funeral directors and the funeral industry
20(2)
VI `Mistreatment' of the dead: Criminal offences pending bodily disposal
22(4)
Conclusion
25(1)
2 Bodily disposal laws
26(33)
Introduction
26(2)
I Burial
28(11)
II Cremation
39(8)
III New and emerging methods: Resomation and promession
47(3)
IV Exposure and natural decomposition
50(1)
V Preservation
51(5)
VI Specific body disposal offences
56(3)
Conclusion
57(2)
3 Disposal of the dead: Legal rights and responsibilities
59(28)
Introduction
59(2)
I Duty of disposal and right to possession of the corpse
61(14)
II Liability for funeral expenses
75(4)
III Disposal of the dead and civil law causes of action
79(8)
Conclusion
86(1)
4 Resolving funeral disputes
87(38)
Introduction
87(1)
I The underlying motives
88(4)
II Resolving competing claims: The common law rules
92(3)
III Separating equal claims
95(2)
IV Flexibility versus finality?
97(3)
V Deviating from the common law framework
100(14)
VI Promoting statutory reform
114(7)
VII Alternative dispute resolution?
121(2)
VIII Pre-emptive rulings?
123(2)
Conclusion
124(1)
5 Funeral instructions: The case for ante-mortem planning
125(35)
Introduction
125(1)
I Funeral instructions: Why do they matter?
126(1)
II The `no property' rule and the common law legacy of Williams v Williams
127(3)
III The common law position in the US, and subsequent statutory developments
130(4)
IV Legislative directions elsewhere
134(2)
V Upholding funeral instructions: The arguments for...
136(9)
VI The arguments against...
145(4)
VII Implementing funeral instructions: Options and issues for reform
149(11)
Conclusion
158(2)
6 Utilising parts of the dead: Organ donation and posthumous reproduction
160(20)
Introduction
160(1)
I Organ donation
161(8)
II Posthumous reproduction
169(11)
Conclusion
179(1)
7 Exhuming the dead
180(32)
Introduction
180(1)
I Why exhume?
181(3)
II Legal authority to exhume
184(7)
III Faculty versus licence: Contrasting approaches
191(11)
IV Disinterment disputes within families
202(1)
V Human rights arguments
203(6)
VI Criminal liability for unauthorised exhumation
209(3)
Conclusion
211(1)
8 Memorialising the dead
212(19)
Introduction
212(2)
I Churchyard or cemetery memorials
214(8)
II Virtual memorials: Commemorating the dead `online'
222(9)
Conclusion
229(2)
9 The law and the dead: Time for a re-evaluation?
231(4)
Bibliography 235(21)
Index 256
Heather Conway is a Senior Lecturer in Law at Queens University, Belfast.