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Full-Text Articles in Law
Unilateral Burdens And Third-Party Harms: Abortion Conscience Laws As Policy Outliers, Nadia Sawicki
Unilateral Burdens And Third-Party Harms: Abortion Conscience Laws As Policy Outliers, Nadia Sawicki
Indiana Law Journal
Most conscience laws establish nearly absolute protections for health care providers unwilling to participate in abortion. Providers’ rights to refuse—and relatedly, their immunity from civil liability, employment discrimination, and other adverse consequences—are often unqualified, even in situations where patients are likely to be harmed. These laws impose unilateral burdens on third parties in an effort to protect the rights of conscientious refusers. As such, they are outliers in the universe of federal and state anti-discrimination and religious freedom statutes, all of which strike a more even balance between individual rights and the prevention of harm to third parties. This Article …
Further Standing Lessons, Heather Elliott
Further Standing Lessons, Heather Elliott
Indiana Law Journal
Professor Elliott wrote a piece for the Indiana Law Journal in 2012 (available here). In this article, she updates her analysis and explores the implications of both the health-care and marriage equality cases on the Court’s standing doctrine.
If A Right To Health Care Is Argued In The Supreme Court, Does Anybody Hear It?, W. David Koeninger
If A Right To Health Care Is Argued In The Supreme Court, Does Anybody Hear It?, W. David Koeninger
Indiana Journal of Law and Social Equality
No abstract provided.
Global Environmental Change: Health And The Challenge For Human Rights, Satvinder Juss
Global Environmental Change: Health And The Challenge For Human Rights, Satvinder Juss
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
No abstract provided.
Rationing Through Choice: A New Approach To Cost-Effectiveness Analysis In Health Care, Arti Kaur Rai
Rationing Through Choice: A New Approach To Cost-Effectiveness Analysis In Health Care, Arti Kaur Rai
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.