Monday, January 16, 2006
Rob Vischer's New Essay
MOJ readers will be interested in this essay by MOJ blogger Rob Vischer:
Conscience in Context: Pharmacist Rights and the Eroding Moral Marketplace
University of St. Thomas, St. Paul/Minneapolis, MN - School of Law
Abstract:
Our society has long esteemed the sanctity of conscience, and our legal
system has reflected that esteem, effectively shielding the individual
from state encroachment, especially in matters of religion. A rapidly
expanding range of disputes, however, is not readily settled under the
individual-versus-state paradigm; rather, the new battle lines are
forming between consumer and provider, with both driven to live out the
dictates of conscience in the marketplace. The legal community has been
slow to adjust to this trend, presuming reflexively that resolutions
are best reached by harnessing state power to defend some conception of
individual conscience, as exemplified by pharmacists' well-publicized
entry onto the center stage of our nation's ongoing culture war drama.
One side invokes conscience to justify legislation that would empower
pharmacists to refuse to fill prescriptions on moral grounds without
the possibility of negative consequences; the other side invokes
conscience on behalf of the consumer to justify legislation that would
require all pharmacies to fill all valid prescriptions. Congress and
the dozens of state legislatures to take up the issue have embraced the
winner-take-all terms in which the combatants have framed the contest.
This article asks us to step back from these two-dimensional terms of
engagement and to contextualize the public relevance of conscience by
outlining the contours of a marketplace where moral claims can operate
and compete without invoking the trump of state power. Instead of
making all pharmacies morally fungible via state edict, the market
allows individual consciences to thrive through overlapping webs of
morality-driven associations and allegiances, even while diametrically
opposed consciences similarly thrive. The zero-sum contest over the
reins of state power is replaced by a reinvigorated civil society,
allowing the commercial sphere to reflect our moral pluralism.
To download/print/read, click here.
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https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2006/01/rob_vischers_ne.html