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Reconsidering Law and Policy Debates John G. Culhane

Reconsidering Law and Policy Debates By John G.  Culhane

Reconsidering Law and Policy Debates by John G. Culhane


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Summary

Offers approaches to social and political issues that have become polarized and resistant to compromise. The cross-disciplined authorship helps shift the focus away from the point of view of rights, politics, or morality and examines the effect of laws and policies from the perspective of public health and welfare.

Reconsidering Law and Policy Debates Summary

Reconsidering Law and Policy Debates: A Public Health Perspective by John G. Culhane

This book approaches a variety of social and political issues that have become highly polarized and resistant to compromise by examining them through a population-based public health perspective. The topics included are some of the most contentious: abortion and reproductive rights; end-of-life issues, including the right to die and the treatment of pain; the connection between racism and poor health outcomes for African-Americans; the right of same-sex couples to marry; the toll of gun violence and how to reduce it; domestic violence and how the criminal justice model fails to deal with it effectively; and how tort compensation and punitive damages can further public health goals. People at every point along the political spectrum will find the book enlightening and informative. Written by eight authors, all of whom have cross-disciplinary expertise, this book shifts the focus away from the point of view of rights, politics, or morality and examines the effect of laws and policies from the perspective of public health and welfare.

Reconsidering Law and Policy Debates Reviews

John Culhane has edited a volume of great originality and timeliness. The book covers many of the most politically and socially charged issues facing American health policy-birth and death, civil rights, violence, and tort litigation. [H]e, and the eminent authors he has assembled, do not rehash the same tired arguments and political divisions that characteristically envelop these political hot buttons. Readers are rescued from the tired values debates that paralyze effective policy discourse-the right to life, gun rights, gay rights, and so forth.... Instead, the book applies a population-based perspective, which illuminates what really is at stake. [I]t is truly remarkable that few scholars have stopped to rigorously examine what the consequence for the public's health would be if decisions were made in certain directions. Culhane's book admirably fills that gap in academic and policy discourse. Policy makers need to read Reconsidering Law and Policy Debates. Just as important, scholars in health law and bioethics need to begin to re-conceptualize their thinking and writing to incorporate the population based perspective. Culhane and his colleagues have opened a fresh pathway to reasoned scholarship and policy going forward for the most controversial issues of our day. -Lawrence O. Gostin O'Neill Professor of Global Health Law Georgetown University Law Center
Reconsidering Law and Policy Debates: A Public Health Perspective...is a superb collection of thought-provoking essays which features some of the most well-regarded health law scholars in the US. It also includes contributors from schools of public health, public affairs, and public administration. The chapters are uniformly well-written and instructive.... John Culhane is to be commended for bringing together such an illustrious group of contributors to address public health, an issue that has been neglected in law schools. ... Well after the sturm und drang surrounding the constitutionality of [health care reform] has dissolved, we will still face problems of balancing liberty, equality, and welfare that this book's thoughtful contributors address. Their voices deserve to be heard in those future, more substantive, debates. - Frank Pasquale Concurring Opinions
John G. Culhane edits a series of critical chapters that take on some of the most polarizing and politically-defining societal problems in modern America -- abortion and other reproductive rights, euthanasia..., gay marriage, domestic violence, rights to carry guns, and spiraling tort litigation.... The authors develop traditional and original thinking surrounding public health impacts and evidence, applying it to complex issues where the health of populations is considered remotely, inaccurately, or not at all. The results can be powerful. There is considerable upside and ingenuity in the authors' attempts to recast these issues toward a communal perspective. Their goal of opening our collective minds to the need for public health parlance among some of the most sensitive issues of law and policy is laudable, responsible, and largely achieved. - James G. Hodge, Jr. Journal of Law, Medicine, and Ethics

About John G. Culhane

John G. Culhane is a Professor of Law and Director of the Health Law Institute at Widener University, School of Law. He is a lecturer at Yale University School of Public Health and a senior scholar at Thomas Jefferson University. He is the author of more than two dozen law review articles that have appeared in journals at Yale Law School, North Carolina School of Law, the University of Wisconsin School of Law, Fordham University School of Law, and William and Mary School of Law. Culhane is regularly featured in national and local broadcast and print media for his scholarship on a wide range of topics including public health issues, government responsibility, and compensation for victims of mass disasters. He blogs at wordinedgewise.org and writes a weekly column for 365gay.com.

Table of Contents

Part I. Birth and Death: 1. Beyond privacy: a population approach to reproductive rights Wendy E. Parmet; 2. Stretching the boundaries of public health: should end of life care be a public health issue? Diane E. Hoffmann; Part II. The Limits of Civil Rights: 3. Dying while black in America: Maslow's hierarchy of need and racial policy-making Vernellia Randall; 4. Public health and marriage (equality) John G. Culhane; Part III. Dimensions of Violence: 5. Using public health to reform the legal and justice response to domestic violence Evan Stark; 6. Law and policy approaches to keeping guns from high risk people Jon S. Vernick, Daniel W. Webster and Katherine Vittes; Part IV. Beyond Compensation: Public Features of Private Litigation: 7. Tort litigation for the public's health Elizabeth Weeks Leonard; 8. Punitive damages and the public health agenda Jean Macchiaroli Eggen.

Additional information

NLS9781107672475
9781107672475
1107672473
Reconsidering Law and Policy Debates: A Public Health Perspective by John G. Culhane
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2014-05-01
270
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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