This book tackles the thorny issue of organ donation and Islam through a multidisciplinary lens giving voice to the various stakeholders involved, including potential donors and Islamic scholars. The collection provides fresh ethical, empirical and sociological insights into the engagement of the Islamic tradition with modern biomedicine.
This book tackles the thorny issue of organ donation and Islam through a multidisciplinary lens giving voice to the various stakeholders involved, including potential donors and Islamic scholars. The collection provides fresh ethical, empirical and sociological insights into the engagement of the Islamic tradition with modern biomedicine.
Mahdiyah Jaffer is research co-ordinator at Al-Mahdi Institute (AMI). Aasim I. Padela is professor of emergency medicine, bioethics and the medical humanities at the Medical College of Wisconsin. Gurch Randhawa is professor of diversity in public health and director of the UK Organ Donation & Transplant Research Centre at University of Bedfordshire.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction by Aasim I. Padela, Mahdiyah Jaffer and Gurch Randhawa Part I: Jurisprudential and Theological Discourses 1. Our Organs Belong to God: Sunni Islamic Legal Perspective to Property in the Body by Rafaqat Rashid 2. Shi?i Juristic Perspectives on Bodily Ownership, Autonomy and the Prohibition of Self-Harm by Mahdiyah Jaffer 3. Organ Donation in Islamic Juridical Ethics by Abdulaziz Sachedina 4. Soul-Searching: Organ Donation, Death and the Social Construction of the Soul by Mansur Ali 5. Islamic Normativity Regarding Brain Death: Implications for Organ Donation by Arif Abdul-Hussain Part II: Ethical Perspectives and Lived Experiences 6. 'You can Receive but not Give': The Ethical Dilemma of Organ Donation by Liyakat Takim 7. 'Muslims do not Donate Organs': A Qualitative Inquiry into Perspectives Towards Organ Transplantation Among Muslims in India by Aasia Qayium and Ankita Mukherjee 8. Are 'Brain-Dead' Patients Really Cadavers? 'Brain Death' from the Viewpoint of Iranian Shi?i fiqh and C
Introduction by Aasim I. Padela, Mahdiyah Jaffer and Gurch Randhawa Part I: Jurisprudential and Theological Discourses 1. Our Organs Belong to God: Sunni Islamic Legal Perspective to Property in the Body by Rafaqat Rashid 2. Shi?i Juristic Perspectives on Bodily Ownership, Autonomy and the Prohibition of Self-Harm by Mahdiyah Jaffer 3. Organ Donation in Islamic Juridical Ethics by Abdulaziz Sachedina 4. Soul-Searching: Organ Donation, Death and the Social Construction of the Soul by Mansur Ali 5. Islamic Normativity Regarding Brain Death: Implications for Organ Donation by Arif Abdul-Hussain Part II: Ethical Perspectives and Lived Experiences 6. 'You can Receive but not Give': The Ethical Dilemma of Organ Donation by Liyakat Takim 7. 'Muslims do not Donate Organs': A Qualitative Inquiry into Perspectives Towards Organ Transplantation Among Muslims in India by Aasia Qayium and Ankita Mukherjee 8. Are 'Brain-Dead' Patients Really Cadavers? 'Brain Death' from the Viewpoint of Iranian Shi?i fiqh and C
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