Tag Archives: Carter v. Canada
Clarifying the Assisted Death Recommendations
Maureen Taylor, Jocelyn Downie, and Jennifer Gibson suggest that recent commentaries on official Reports on assisted death in Canada misstate the recommendations made in the Reports and their relationship to the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Carter.
The Need to Discuss Death-Hastening Methods
Stuart Chambers discusses an oversight in the Report by the Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying.
Not Dead Yet: An Unprincipled Position against Assisted Death
Stuart Chambers calls on Not Dead Yet to re-evaluate the beliefs that have shaped their anti-euthanasia and anti-assisted suicide mindset.
Dangers of a Lax Assisted Death Regime
Trudo Lemmens lists a number of concerns with the recent Report of the Special Joint Committee on Physician-Assisted Dying.
The Unwilling Ethicist and Assisted Dying
Lori Seller and Veronique Fraser explore whether clinical ethicists should have the right to conscientiously object to ethics consultations for assisted dying.


