발행년 : | 2002 |
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구분 : | 학위논문 |
학술지명 : | 경상대학교 대학원: 법학과 (석사) |
관련링크 : | http://www.riss.kr/link?id=T8147552 |
臟器移植에 관한 형사정책적 硏究 = (A) study on the criminal policy of organ transplantion
초록 (Abstract)
'The law on transplanting internal organs and etc.' was enacted and promulgated
on February 8, 1999 and has been enforced since February 9, 2000 with a view to
eradicating the illegal transactions of internal organs violating the provisions
of the Constitutional Law on the dignity of human beings and running counter to
the concepts of social ethics and providing all persons that need organ
transplant with equal opportunity and at the same time legalizing the practices
of extracting internal organs from brain-dead persons and increasing the supply
of organs and giving new life to those who suffer from chronic organ
failure.
Yet the trouble is that the organ donation of brain-dead persons has
decreased to about 33 percent and that transplant from living bodies has dropped
to 20 percent. And organ transactions are still carried on and problems related
to organ transplant have come to the forefront, and there is a need for a
revision of the Law.
In this context, this study focused on taking a look at
the problems which have taken place since the enforcement of the Law as well as
problems related to organ transplant from the viewpoint of the original purport
of the Law and the criminal policies of the nation.
Chapter II formulated
organ transplant, part of doctors' medical treatment on the basis of established
discussions by interpreting the concept in a broad and narrow sense, dealing
with the features and kinds of transplant. Then the chapter covered the process
of organ transplant, which was introduced as a therapeutic method, here to stay
and evolving from a experimental stage with the development of Cyclosporine, a
immunosuppressant in the 1970s, and took a look at the current practices of
organ transplantation on the basis of the reports of medical fields and
statistics related to organ transplants. Particularly, in Korea's case, the
chapter dealt with the situation before and after the establishment of 'the law
on transplanting internal organs and etc. ' Also the chapter took a brief look
at American UNOS and Korean KONOS, the networks of organ distribution across the
nation.
Chapter II handled the history and contents of the Korean 'law on
transplanting internal organs and etc. ' after taking a look at the process of
foreign countries establishing the organ transplantation law and its contents in
consideration of the fact that world-wide discussions about the legalization of
organ transplant were launched in the process of organ transplant taking root as
a therapeutic method due to the development of medicine and Korea; and that
Korea established the law by making reference to the established laws of foreign
countries.
Chapter IV linked problems with brain death, the agreement of
donors to the extraction of organs, and the illegal transactions of human
organs, which come from the fact that organ transplants are a special medical
behavior in need of the organs of others to the provisions of 'the law on
transplanting internal organs and etc. '
First, problems with Brain death
dealt with the adoption or rejection of the Brain-death theory, the
determination criteria of Brain death and the provisions of the cause of death
of brain-death people.
Second, the agreement of organ donors, or their
families, to organ extraction is of great importance, since organ transplant is
not related to a medical treatment designed to help the donors, but capable of
incurring serious problems or doing harm to the donors and the dead bodies,
should be handled with care. Opinions about the subjects of the right to
agreement the range and priority of those with right to agreement, and the
method and limits of agreement, etc, may come into conflict with each other.
This problem is closely connected with the difficulties of obtaining organs for
transplant. The chapter dealt with the problems in terms of Brain-death persons
and the deceased.
Third, there are problems related to the illegal
transactions of human organs in the wake of a discrepancy between organ supply
and demand. Most of the nations around the world ban such transactions and
punish those who commit a organ-related crime. But illegal organ transactions
seem not to disappear because of such a discrepancy and a human desire for
healthy longevity, so the chapter took a look at the problems of organ
transaction.
Chapter V brought the foreign cases, where human dignity and
value and human rights were involved, to the forefront in relation to the
transplant of ‘fetus's organs and etc.’ and took a look at the problems with the
realities of abortion in Korea. On this basis, the research presented solutions
to treatment using ‘fetus's organs and etc, ’ in relation to abortion problems.
There have been attempts at materializing organ transplant and treatment using
embryo cloning or human cloning. These problems of embryo cloning and human
cloning cannot be morally, socially and legally legitimized, but the trends of
the world seem to take priority in the matter. So the researcher thinks it
necessary that legal devices should be worked out on the basis of a thorough
analysis of problems with embryo cloning or human clone and the trends of the
world.
Chapter VI presented innovations about major problems related to organ
transplant in consideration of the purport of 'the law on transplanting internal
organs and etc.' and its problems related to the enforcement of the law as well
as the results of the established researches.
In conclusion, the researcher
would like to make the following suggestions. Poor people with chronic organ
failure should be given at least the minimum chance for an organ transplant, the
national health insurance system should include all the areas of organ
transplant and financial resources should be secured. As organ donors belong to
a lower economic bracket, they should be provided with some compensation for a
living. The researcher think it natural that those donors should be compensated
in return for their organ donation to the humanitarian demand for free organ
donation only means trying to ban commercial transaction.