Abstract
Should prisoners be allowed to access assisted suicide? Whereas the ethical and legal issues regarding assisted suicide have now been extensively discussed in the literature, surprisingly scarce attention has been given to the pressing issue of inmates requesting assistance in dying. Through an analysis supported by the Swiss legal framework, I first argue that the principle of equivalence in prison medicine, which states that prisoners ought to receive the same level of health care as the general population does not prove a solid basis in arguing for prisoners’ right to assisted suicide. Over the course of the paper, I defend the view that the right to access assisted suicide is to be understood as a liberty that cannot be removed from incarcerated individuals. I argue that removing such a liberty cannot be consistently held within a legal framework where the death penalty does not exist, for doing so necessarily forgoes the State's ability to decide on when and how prisoners' lives end, in turn necessarily leaving them the liberty to end theirs when they decide so. I finally argue against the position that the capacity for autonomous choice is lacking in inmates by disentangling the particular features of the prison‐setting and show that the context of incarceration is not so substantially different from regular cases of suicide assistance that it warrants a difference in treatment. The position I propose proves important in order to both respect prisoners' rights and ensure they retain a minimum level of control over their existences.
Highlights
Should prisoners be allowed to access assisted suicide? Whereas the ethical and legal issues regarding assisted suicide have been extensively discussed in the literature, surprisingly scarce attention has been given to the pressing issue of inmates requesting assistance in dying
Through an analysis supported by the Swiss legal framework, I first argue that the principle of equivalence in prison medicine, which states that prisoners ought to receive the same level of health care as the general population does not prove a solid basis in arguing for prisoners’ right to assisted suicide
Having established that the legal conditions for refusing access to suicide assistance for inmates must necessarily rely on principles that cannot be dissociated from the idea of the death penalty, being unlawful in the context of Swiss law and of all other jurisdictions who share this abolitionist characteristic, I turn to the issue of autonomy
Summary
Should prisoners be allowed to access assisted suicide? Whereas the ethical and legal issues regarding assisted suicide have been extensively discussed in the literature, surprisingly scarce attention has been given to the pressing issue of inmates requesting assistance in dying. Incarceration is meant only to deprive citizens of one right, that of freedom of movement, and inmates' right to private life is protected by both the Constitution and the Convention It would appear at first glance that there is no legal ground to deprive prisoners of their liberty to access assistance in dying. Having established that the legal conditions for refusing access to suicide assistance for inmates must necessarily rely on principles that cannot be dissociated from the idea of the death penalty, being unlawful in the context of Swiss law and of all other jurisdictions who share this abolitionist characteristic, I turn to the issue of autonomy. CONFLICT OF INTEREST The author declares no conflict of interest
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