Selling Human Organs Between the Controls of Islamic Law and the Limits of Algerian Health Law (Comparative Study)

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Chikh Mohamed Zakaria, Benbadra Affif, Hachi Mohamed Ismail

Abstract

     The trade-in human organs has become one of the popular ways to make money, and despite the criminalization of the phenomenon in most countries of the world, the increase in hotbeds of armed conflicts, the desire to control life, the disparity in the standard of living between individuals, and the high rates of poverty, contributed significantly to the tendency of many to deal with this trade.


From this standpoint, it is necessary to question the position of both jurisprudence and law on the issue of trafficking in human organs, the principle of free dealing, and the legal and legal limits contained therein.

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Author Biography

Chikh Mohamed Zakaria, Benbadra Affif, Hachi Mohamed Ismail

Dr.Chikh Mohamed Zakaria1

Dr. Benbadra Affif2

Hachi Mohamed Ismail3

1Faculty of Law and Political Science, University Center of Maghnia (Algeria)

2Faculty of Law and Political Science/University Abdelhamid ibn badis, mostaganem (Algeria)

3Phd student at the Faculty of Law and Political Science, University of Saida (Algeria)