November 3, 2025

Call For Interest: Section 17: Legal and Ethical Boundaries of the Right to Die--and the Right to Kill

From Anne Wagner, Research Associate Professor Université du Littoral Côte d'Opale (CGU Calais)

Call for Chapter Proposals — Section 17: “Legal and Ethical Boundaries of the Right to Die—and the Right to Kill” 

I am pleased to announce the call for contributions to Section 17 of the forthcoming International Handbook of Legal Language and Communication: From Text to Semiotics (Springer), which I have the honor to edit. 

This section explores the legal, ethical, philosophical, and cultural dimensions of the right to die—and the right to kill, examining how law, ethics, and governance define and contest the boundaries of life, death, and legitimate violence. Researchers and practitioners across law, ethics, philosophy, medicine, and the social sciences are warmly invited to submit abstracts (≈300 words). 

Submissions and inquiries: prof.thiagorp@gmail.com Cc: Anne Wagner — General Editor (valwagnerfr@yahoo.com) 🔗 Handbook link: https://meteor.springer.com/ihllc Anne Wagner, Research Associate Professor Université du Littoral Côte d'Opale (CGU Calais) Habilitation à Diriger des Recherches en Droit Privé (Private Law), Lille University Ph.D. in Jurilinguistics, Université du Littoral Côte d'Opale French Research Award Recipient - Rank A.



Call for Interest Section 17

Legal and Ethical Boundaries of the Right to Die—and the Right to Kill

Section Editor: Thiago Rodrigues-Pereira

Contact: prof.thiagorp@gmail.com

Cc: Anne Wagner (General Editor) valwagnerfr@yahoo.com

We invite chapter proposals for the Legal and Ethical Boundaries of the Right to Die—and the Right to Kill section of the forthcoming International Handbook of Legal Language and Communication: From Text to Semiotics.

This section investigates the multifaceted legal, ethical, philosophical, and socio-political dimensions of the right to die—and the right to kill, offering an interdisciplinary exploration of how contemporary societies define, contest, and regulate the boundaries of life, death, and legitimate violence. Extending beyond doctrinal and legislative analysis, it situates end-of-life and life-taking decision-making within broader frameworks of human rights, bioethics, and governance, interrogating how power over life and death is exercised, justified, and contested.

 


Scope and Focus

Legal and Comparative Dimensions

 

·         Examination of national and transnational developments in euthanasia, assisted suicide, palliative care, and state-sanctioned killing (such as capital punishment, military engagement, and law enforcement).

·         Analysis of how legal systems interpret autonomy, dignity, culpability, and the sanctity of life across diverse traditions—common law, civil law, religious, and customary frameworks.

·         Exploration of the role of courts, legislatures, and regulatory bodies in shaping legal precedents and balancing state interests with personal freedoms and collective security.

·         Consideration of international human rights instruments, including the European Convention on Human Rights and UN declarations, in framing debates around both the right to die and the right to kill.

Ethical and Biolegal Tensions

 

·         Discussion of key bioethical principles—autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice—and their application to end-of-life and life-taking contexts.

·         Critical engagement with medical and technological advances (life-support systems, neurotechnologies, AI-assisted triage, lethal medical interventions) that blur distinctions between sustaining, ending, and taking life.

·         Analysis of professional responsibilities, ethical decision-making, and conscientious objection within healthcare, military, and law enforcement settings.


·         Assessment of the implications of social inequality, vulnerability, disability rights, and healthcare access in shaping ethical and legal outcomes concerning who may die—and who may kill.

Societal and Cultural Contexts

 

·         Investigation of how societal values, religious traditions, and moral narratives inform public and legislative attitudes toward assisted dying, state punishment, and justifiable killing.

·         Consideration of vulnerable populations—such as the elderly, disabled, imprisoned, or economically disadvantaged—in debates on consent, coercion, and protection from harm.

·         Study of advocacy movements, abolitionist campaigns, and policy reforms that shape public discourse on the legitimacy of ending or taking life.

·         Reflection on the sociocultural and political imaginaries that underpin collective understandings of mercy, justice, and sovereignty in decisions over death.

Semiotic, Linguistic, and Rhetorical Approaches

 

·         Analysis of the language and symbolism surrounding death, dignity, and killing in legal, political, and media discourse.

·         Exploration of how metaphors such as “mercy killing,” “death with dignity,” “state-sanctioned death,” and “legitimate force” shape public perception and legal framing.

·         Examination of rhetorical strategies used in judicial reasoning, legislative drafting, and advocacy communications that define moral and legal boundaries of dying and killing.

Global and Emerging Challenges

 

·         Study of transnational advocacy networks and policy diffusion in euthanasia, capital punishment, and humanitarian law.

·         Discussion of cross-border practices such as assisted suicide tourism, international execution protocols, and military interventions with ethical or legal implications.

·         Consideration of digital and technological frontiers—including AI-assisted decision-making, autonomous weapons systems, and data ethics in life-and-death governance.

·         Reflection on privatization trends in healthcare, security, and biotechnology, and their influence on accessibility, accountability, and ethical oversight in decisions to end or take life.

 


Academic Perspectives

Contributions are encouraged from law, philosophy, bioethics, sociology, communication, and cultural studies, among others.

Interdisciplinary approaches bridging doctrinal, empirical, and theoretical analysis are particularly welcome.

Possible lenses include:


·         Human rights law and comparative legal theory

·         Bioethics and medical jurisprudence

·         Semiotics of law and communication

·         Critical, feminist, or postcolonial perspectives on death, violence, and legitimacy

 


Policy-Oriented Questions

·         How do legal systems balance personal autonomy and state authority in both dying and killing?

·         What ethical and procedural standards guide decisions over life and death in medicine, law enforcement, or war?

·         How do language and narrative shape societal understanding of “legitimate death”?

·         In what ways do technological, economic, and political transformations challenge traditional moral and legal boundaries?

 


Call for Contributions

We welcome proposals that:

 

·         Present comparative or interdisciplinary analyses of death and killing within legal and ethical frameworks.

·         Explore the linguistic, symbolic, and communicative dimensions of how societies justify or contest death.

·         Offer case studies or empirical analyses of evolving legal practices, policy reforms, and public responses.

·         Provide innovative theoretical or methodological insights into how power over life and death is expressed through law and discourse.

 


Submission Guidelines

Please submit a short abstract (approximately 300 words) outlining your proposed contribution and its relevance to the section’s scope.

Send expressions of interest and abstracts to:

 Thiago Rodrigues-Pereira (Section Editor): prof.thiagorp@gmail.com

 Cc Anne Wagner (General Editor): valwagnerfr@yahoo.com

 

 Handbook link: https://meteor.springer.com/ihllc

 

 

 

 Handbook link: https://meteor.springer.com/ihllc


 


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