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This book brings together a range of theoretical perspectives to consider fundamental questions of health law and the place of the body within it. Health, and more recently health law, has long been animated by discussions of particular bodies - whether they are disordered, diseased, or disabled - but each of these classificatory regimes claim some knowledge about the body. This edited collection aims to uncover and challenge the fundamental assumptions that underpin medico-legal knowledge claims about such bodies. This exploration is achieved through a mix of perspectives, but many contributors look towards embodiment as a perspective that understands bodies to be shaped by their institutional contexts. Much of this work alerts us to the idea that medical practitioners not only respond to healthcare issues, but also create them through their own understandings of 'normality' and 'fixing'. Bodies, as a result, cannot be understood outside of, or as separate to, their medical and legalcontexts. This compelling book pushes the possibility of new directions in health care and health justice.
Chapter 5 is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com.
Auteur
Chris Dietz is Lecturer in Law and Social Justice at the School of Law, University of Leeds, UK.
Mitchell Travis is Lecturer in Law and Social Justice and Deputy Director for the Centre of Law and Social Justice, in the School of Law at the University of Leeds, UK.
Michael Thomson is Director of the School of Law's Centre for Law and Social Justice, University of Leeds, UK, where he is also a Chair in Health Law.
Résumé
This book brings together a range of theoretical perspectives to consider fundamental questions of health law and the place of the body within it. Health, and more recently health law, has long been animated by discussions of particular bodies - whether they are disordered, diseased, or disabled - but each of these classificatory regimes claim some knowledge about the body. This edited collection aims to uncover and challenge the fundamental assumptions that underpin medico-legal knowledge claims about such bodies. This exploration is achieved through a mix of perspectives, but many contributors look towards embodiment as a perspective that understands bodies to be shaped by their institutional contexts. Much of this work alerts us to the idea that medical practitioners not only respond to healthcare issues, but also create them through their own understandings of 'normality' and 'fixing'. Bodies, as a result, cannot be understood outside of, or as separate to, their medical and legal contexts. This compelling book pushes the possibility of new directions in health care and health justice.
Chapter 5 is available open access under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License via link.springer.com.
Contenu
1.Chapter 1 Nobody, Anybody, Somebody, Everybody: A Jurisprudence of the Body-Chris Dietz, Michael Thomson and Mitchell Travis
Part 1: The Body of Health Law
2.Chapter 2 Reasoning from the Body: Universal Vulnerability and Social Justice-Martha Albertson Fineman
3.Chapter 3 Studying Public Health Law: Principles, Politics, and Populations as Patients-John Coggan
4.Chapter 4 Bioinequalities: Rethinking legal responses to the Biological and Intergenerational Harm caused by Inequality-Karen O'Connell and Isabel Karpin
5.Chapter 5 Healthcare, Wellbeing, and the Regulation of Diversity in Healing-Emilie Cloatre and Nayeli Urquiza-Haas
Part 2: Bodies of Health
6.Chapter 6 Temporal Bodies: Emergencies, Emergence, and Intersex Embodiment-Fae Garland and Mitchell Travis
7.Chapter 7 Death Before Birth: Liminal Bodies and Legal Frameworks-Danielle Fuller, Karolina Kuberska, Jeannette Littlemore, Sheelagh McGuinness and Sarah Turner
8.Chapter 8 Depathologising Gender: Vulnerability in Trans Health Law-Chris Dietz and Ruth Pearce
9.Chapter 9 Feminist Activism in the Context of Clinical Trials and Drug Roll-Out-Aziza Ahmed
Part 3: Reframing Health Law through Bodies
10.Chapter 10 Establishing Boundaries for Speculation about Artificial Wombs, Ectogenesis, Gender and the Gestating Body-Claire Horn and Elizabeth Chloe Romanis
11.Chapter 11 A Relational Responsibilities Framework for Children's Healthcare Law-Jo Bridgeman
12.Chapter 12 Embodied Integrity, Shaping Surgeries, and the Profoundly Disabled Child-Marie Fox, Michael Thomson, and Joshua Warburton
Index