Since the 1980s legislators and courts have responded in a variety of
ways to the onset of the AIDS pandemic. Some responses have been
sensitive to the needs of those with HIV, seeking to guarantee
heightened levels of confidentiality or freedom from discrimination.
Others have sought to use the law as a tool to limit the spread of
HIV, for example by imposing liability for its transmission or
restricting the freedoms of those who are HIV-positive. Elsewhere,
doctors and researchers have grappled with the legal and ethical
problems surrounding testing for a condition which many people may not
want to be aware of, and with the conflicts which can arise between
respect for individual autonomy and the promotion of public health.
More recently, treatments for HIV have developed to the extent that
for many HIV is a chronic disease rather than an inevitably fatal
condition. Such treatments, however, pose new challenges: they are
expensive and as such are not widely available in those parts of the
globe where HIV infection is most widespread. This has caused tensions
over issues such as asylum, immigration and deportation, and the
protection of intellectual property rights which may bar such
treatments from being available where the need is most acute. This
book examines and evaluate these issues in comparative perspective. It
draws on legal responses to other sexually transmitted infections (and
contagious diseases) but concentrates on HIV and AIDS.
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Essays in Honour of Professor Mirjan Damaska
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781847314666
Publisert
2015
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Hart Publishing
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter