ABSTRACT

There has been a general assumption in the international debate surrounding organ procurement that Presumed Consent (opting-out) systems produce better results than Express Consent (opting-in) systems. This study uses the French case to challenge this widely held assumption and argues that the French presumed consent systems coexist with patterns of behaviour that in practice do not mobilize the law. It explores four key areas to current research in socio-legal studies focussing on the state and nature of social solidarity, social engineering and the changing nature of the citizen-state relations, state intervention in the event of death and discretion in use of corpses and recent modifications of the status of medical professionals as figures of authority and agents of state policy. Using material based on interviews with medical professionals, this title will be a valuable resource for researchers, academics, policy-makers and practitioners with an interest in this complex and topical subject.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part |58 pages

Organ Retrieval in Hospitals: Walking on Thin Ice

chapter |18 pages

The 'Living Cadaver' 1

chapter |13 pages

Unpredictable Situations

chapter |16 pages

Whose Gift?

part |47 pages

Law and Policy

chapter |16 pages

The Law as Policy

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion