Description
This casebook teaches students to think like lawyers using many kinds of skill-building problems. It teaches them to think about the problems of regulating bioethical issues not just through cases, but with patients' accounts of their illnesses, doctors' reports of their encounters with patients, ethicists' reflections on our duties to ourselves and those around us, researchers' findings on how medical decisions are made and the results those decisions produce, and the impact of various forms of legal regulation. Finally, it teaches students to understand the law broadly with explorations of larger conceptual issues about law and American culture.