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Health and Human Rights: Global and European Perspectives 2nd ed

Edited by: Brigit Toebes, Mette Hartlev, Aart Hendriks, Katharina O Cathaoir, Janne Rothmar Herrmann, Henriette Sinding Aasen

ISBN13: 9781839700576
Previous Edition ISBN: 9789400001510
Published: April 2022
Publisher: Larcier Intersentia Publishers
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback
Price: £97.00



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‘Health and human rights’ is an important dimension of international and European human rights and health law. It is multi-disciplinary, engaging scholars and practitioners of public health and medicine, as well as legal scholars and human rights lawyers. Taking a ‘health and human rights approach’ means applying international, regional and domestic human rights law to a wide range of health-related issues.

Human rights law informs other areas of law that engage with health issues, including international and domestic health law, biolaw and bioethics, patients’ rights, and environmental law. It brings a new, and often more international, as well as a moral dimension to existing legal analyses of health issues. This is essential in an increasingly interconnected and globalised world, where health concerns are omnipresent and can no longer be addressed solely at a domestic level.

This book focuses on the legal interfaces between ‘health’ and ‘human rights’, taking both a global as well as a European approach. Globally, there are tremendous challenges when it comes to the protection of collective and individual health. Such challenges include weak (primary) healthcare systems, the spread of infectious diseases, such as COVID-19, and the increase of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), as well as the health effects of air pollution and climate change.

In such settings, human rights can, potentially, play an important role in protecting the rights of vulnerable individuals. It is a compelling framework for assessing these and other questions in the health field, as it couples health-related problems with a legal and moral dimension. The international recognition and definition of the ‘right to health’ is at the centre of this, but there are many other relevant human rights standards, including the right to life, the right to respect for privacy and family life, and the right to have access to information. International case law in the health field has made its mark when it comes to matters like access to health services, abortion, and inhuman and degrading treatment in health settings. Increasingly, links are being sought between human rights and other international standards protecting health, in particular the standards adopted by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The European context is, to some extent, a region sui generis, not only in terms of health issues and health outcomes, but also from a political and legal perspective. The authoritative case law of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) of the Council of Europe has increasingly touched upon health-related issues.

Subjects:
Human Rights and Civil Liberties, Medical Law and Bioethics
Contents:
PART I. INTRODUCTION
Chapter 1. Introducing Health and Human Rights: Global and European Perspectives (p.
1)
Chapter 2. The Right to Health: Central Concepts (p.
23)
Chapter 3. Human Rights Principles and Patient Rights (p.
53)
PART II. LEGAL FRAMEWORK
Chapter 4. UN Institutions and Health and Human Rights (p.
91)
Chapter 5. The Council of Europe (p.
119)
Chapter 6. The European Union: A Health and Human Rights Perspective (p.
163)
PART III. SELECTED TOPICS
Chapter 7. Access to Health (p.
203)
Chapter 8. Vulnerability and Autonomy: Competing Ideas in Human Rights (p.
221)
Chapter 9. Disability (p.
255)
Chapter 10. Reproductive Health (p.
275)
Chapter 11. Death and Dying (p.
315)
Chapter 12. Digital Healthcare Technologies and Human Rights (p.
327)
Chapter 13. Public Health and Human Rights (p.
359)
PART IV. CONCLUSIONS, CHALLENGES AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Chapter 14. Conclusions (p.
393)