The article analyses recent legal challenges of the prohibition of assisted suicide in England and Wales to review where we are in the debate for reform, and where we can go. The article, principally, advocates for an evidence-based new governmental inquiry. Aside the fact that this is widely-supported by various interested parties, this argument stems from the approach recently attempted by claimants in English courts in challenging the prohibition of assisted suicide, and that is, an evidence-based approach to judicial review. As this article discusses, the review of the available evidence is unlikely to be done by English courts, but what this new legal strategy does is to send a strong message to Parliament and the government that there is a need to identify and examine the evidence. The findings of a fresh governmental inquiry, will allow Parliament to engage in a careful, informed review of the law and practice on assisted suicide and decide whether there is another way to protect the vulnerable, while respecting individual choice. The benefits of this inquiry go beyond England and Wales; an English (or indeed UK-wide) inquiry will inform discussions currently taking place elsewhere, and vice versa.
History
Citation
Nataly Papadopoulou, Dying with Assistance: The Call for an Inquiry, the Power of a declaration, the role of evidence, Medical Law Review, Volume 30, Issue 1, Winter 2022, Pages 81–109, https://doi.org/10.1093/medlaw/fwab048
Author affiliation
College of Social Sci Arts and Humanities
College of Social Sci Arts and Humanities/Leicester Law School