A sufficiency threshold is not a harm principle: A better alternative to best interests for overriding parental decisions
A sufficiency threshold is not a harm principle: A better alternative to best interests for overriding parental decisions
Douglas Diekema influentially argues that interference with parental decisions is not in fact guided by the child’s best interests, but rather by a more permissive standard, which he calls the harm principle. This article first seeks to clarify this alternative position and defend it against certain existing criticisms, before offering a new criticism and alternative. This ‘harm principle’ has been criticized for (i) lack of adequate moral grounding, and (ii) being as indeterminate as the best interest standard that it seeks to replace. I argue that these are not serious problems. I take Diekema’s negative point to be right—our actual standard for intervention is not literally the best interests of the child—but I disagree with his proposed replacement. First, Diekema’s proposed harm threshold should be more carefully distinguished from Mill’s harm principle. Second, there is no reason to assume that the standard for permissible intervention coincides with the threshold for harm (or serious harm). Thus, I propose that the best alternative to the best interests standard is not a harm principle, but rather a sufficiency threshold between adequate (or ‘good enough’) and inadequate (or ‘substandard’) parenting.
Douglas Diekema, John Stuart Mill, best interests, harm principle, parental decisions, sufficiency
90-97
Saunders, Ben
aed7ba9f-f519-4bbf-a554-db25b684037d
January 2021
Saunders, Ben
aed7ba9f-f519-4bbf-a554-db25b684037d
Saunders, Ben
(2021)
A sufficiency threshold is not a harm principle: A better alternative to best interests for overriding parental decisions.
Bioethics, 35 (1), .
(doi:10.1111/bioe.12796).
Abstract
Douglas Diekema influentially argues that interference with parental decisions is not in fact guided by the child’s best interests, but rather by a more permissive standard, which he calls the harm principle. This article first seeks to clarify this alternative position and defend it against certain existing criticisms, before offering a new criticism and alternative. This ‘harm principle’ has been criticized for (i) lack of adequate moral grounding, and (ii) being as indeterminate as the best interest standard that it seeks to replace. I argue that these are not serious problems. I take Diekema’s negative point to be right—our actual standard for intervention is not literally the best interests of the child—but I disagree with his proposed replacement. First, Diekema’s proposed harm threshold should be more carefully distinguished from Mill’s harm principle. Second, there is no reason to assume that the standard for permissible intervention coincides with the threshold for harm (or serious harm). Thus, I propose that the best alternative to the best interests standard is not a harm principle, but rather a sufficiency threshold between adequate (or ‘good enough’) and inadequate (or ‘substandard’) parenting.
Text
BIOE.12796
- Version of Record
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 14 July 2020
Published date: January 2021
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
I thank two anonymous referees and Clancy Pegg for their helpful comments.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Authors. Bioethics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Keywords:
Douglas Diekema, John Stuart Mill, best interests, harm principle, parental decisions, sufficiency
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 444333
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/444333
ISSN: 0269-9702
PURE UUID: d64807c2-5310-4238-ad22-027adf1f2dd8
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Date deposited: 13 Oct 2020 16:42
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:36
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