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Protecting Life, Facilitating Death: The bureaucratic experience of organized suicide assistance

Titel
Protecting Life, Facilitating Death: The bureaucratic experience of organized suicide assistance
Verlag
Medicine Anthropology Theory
Datum
2020
Zitierweise
Andrade Neves, M. (2020). “Protecting Life, Facilitating Death: The bureaucratic experience of organized suicide assistance.” Medicine Anthropology Theory.
Art
Text

The process of organized assisted suicide (OAS), permitted in Switzerland under specific circumstances, requires applicants to produce and circulate an array of medico-legal documents. Obtaining these documents involves stressful interactions with family doctors, turning the bureaucratic experience into a very personal, and rather intimate, form of sociality. In this Think Piece I suggest that by following how such documents are produced and circulated, we can better understand how organized assisted suicide reveals an underlying tension between two figurations of life. Normatively, life is seen as a source of value that needs to be protected and preserved; but OAS statutes acknowledge that some individual lives require professional assistance to die. While legal protections are set up in order to protect lifefrom OAS, these same protections are responded to via the establishment of a bureaucratic infrastructure that facilitates death through documentary practices. In this sense, medico-legal documents not only expose a tension between life and personal lives, but also enable the navigation through a bureaucratic infrastructure that facilitates organized death within a legal framework designed to protect life.

SFB 1171 Affective Societies
BGSMCS
Berlin Southern Theory Lecture