Stanton / Devaney / Farrell | Pioneering Healthcare Law | E-Book | sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 334 Seiten

Reihe: Biomedical Law and Ethics Library

Stanton / Devaney / Farrell Pioneering Healthcare Law

Essays in Honour of Margaret Brazier
1. Auflage 2015
ISBN: 978-1-317-50600-3
Verlag: CRC Press
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)

Essays in Honour of Margaret Brazier

E-Book, Englisch, 334 Seiten

Reihe: Biomedical Law and Ethics Library

ISBN: 978-1-317-50600-3
Verlag: CRC Press
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)



This book celebrates Professor Margaret Brazier’s outstanding contribution to the field of healthcare law and bioethics. It examines key aspects developed in Professor Brazier’s agenda-setting body of work, with contributions being provided by leading experts in the field from the UK, Australia, the U.S. and continental Europe. They examine a range of current and future challenges for healthcare law and bioethics, representing state-of-the-art scholarship in the field.

The book is organised into five parts. Part One discusses key principles and themes in healthcare law and bioethics. Part Two examines the dynamics of the patient-doctor relationship, in particular the role of patients. Part Three explores legal and ethical issues relating to the human body. Part Four discusses the regulation of reproduction, and Part Five examines the relationship between the criminal law and the healthcare process.

Offering a collaborative review of key and innovative themes in the field, the book will be of great interest and use to academics and students working in healthcare law and bioethics, and those working in health policy, law and regulation at both national and international levels.

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Weitere Infos & Material


Preface, Brenda Hale 1. Pioneering Healthcare Law: Reflecting on the Work and Contribution of Margaret Brazier, Catherine Stanton, Sarah Devaney, Anne-Maree Farrell and Alexandra Mullock Part I: Principles and Concepts in Healthcare Law 2. Waxing and Waning: the Shifting Sands of Autonomy on the Medico-Legal Shore, J. Kenyon Mason & Graeme Laurie 3. Compulsory Vaccination and the Collective Good: Going Beyond a Civic Duty?’, Nicola Glover-Thomas & Søren Holm 4.The Value of Human Life in Healthcare Law: Life versus Death in the Hands of the Judiciary, Rob Heywood & Alexandra Mullock 5. Decisions at the End of Life: An Attempt at Rationalisation, Sheila McLean 6.The Past, Present and Future of EU Health Law, Tamara Hervey 7. Beyond Medicine, Patients and the Law: Policy and Governance in 21st Century Health Law, John Coggon & Lawrence O Gostin Part II: Patient-Doctor Relations 8. ‘(I Love You!) I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do, I Do’: Breaches of Sexual Boundaries by Patients in their Relationships with Healthcare Professionals, Suzanne Ost & Hazel Biggs 9. When Things Go Wrong: Patient Harm, Responsibility and (Dis) Empowerment Anne-Maree Farrell and Sarah Devaney 10. Critical Decisions for Critically Ill Infants: Principles, Processes, Problems Giles Birchley and Richard Huxtable 11. The Role of the Family in Healthcare Decisions: the dead and the dying Monica Navarro-Michel Part III: Law, ethics and the human body12. Exploring the legacy of the Retained Organs Commission a decade on: Lessons Learned and the Danger of Lessons Lost Jean McHale 13. Property Interests in Human Tissue: Is the Law still an Ass? Muireann Quigley and Loane Skene 14. Law and Humanity: Exploring Organ Donation using the Brazier Method Marleen Eijkholt and Ruth Stirton 15. Sex Change Surgery for Transgender Minors: Should Doctors Speak Out? Simona Giordano, César Palacios-González and John Harris 16. The Lawyer’s Prestige Iain Brassington and Imogen Jones Part IV: Regulating Reproduction 17. The Science of Muddling Through: Categorising Embryos Marie Fox and Sheelagh McGuinness 18. Revisiting the Regulation of the Reproduction Business Danielle Griffiths and Amel Alghrani 19. Regulating Responsible Reproduction David Archard 20. Donor Conception and Information Disclosure: Welfare or Consent? Rosamund Scott 21. Are We Still "Policing Pregnancy"? Sara Fovargue and Jose Miola Part V: The Criminal Law and the Healthcare Process 22. Vulnerability and the Criminal Law: The Implications of Brazier’s Research for Safeguarding People at Risk Kirsty Keywood and Zuzanna Sawicka 23. Revisiting the Criminal Law on the Transmission of Disease David Gurnham and Andrew Ashworth 24. Maternal responsibility to the child not yet born Emma Cave and Catherine Stanton 25. Compromise Medicalisation Roger Brownsword and Jeffrey Wale


Catherine Stanton is Lecturer in Law in the Centre for Social Ethics and Policy in the School of Law at the University of Manchester. Catherine’s research interest lies in healthcare law and policy. She (with Hannah Quirk and David Gurnham) is a partner in an ESRC-funded seminar-series which is considering issues surrounding the criminalisation of the transmission of disease. An output of the project is a forthcoming edited collection which Catherine is co-editing with Hannah Quirk: Criminalising Contagion: Legal and Ethical Challenges of Disease Transmission and the Law (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming).

Sarah Devaney is Senior Lecturer in Law in the Centre for Social Ethics and Policy and co-Director of the Manchester Centre for Regulation & Governance (ManReg) in the School of Law, University of Manchester. She has been an investigator on a number of funded projects examining the human body, the dynamics of clinical negligence claiming, the regulation of reputations and the challenges of the food system. She has particular expertise in the regulation of stem cell research and innovation. Recent publications include Stem Cell Research and the Collaborative Regulation of Innovation (Routledge, 2014).

Anne-Maree Farrell is Australian Research Council Future Fellow and Associate Professor in the Faculty of Law at Monash University, Australia. She was previously based in the Centre for Social Ethics and Policy, School of Law, University of Manchester (2005-2011). Her research expertise lies generally in health law and policy, with specific interests in the law and regulation of human body parts (blood, organs and stem cells), health technologies, and public health. She has published widely in a range of internationally recognised journals and edited collections. Her books include European Law and New Health Technologies (OUP 2013), co-edited with M Flear, T Hervey and T Murphy; The Politics of Blood: Ethics Innovation and the Regulation of Risk (CUP 2012); and Organ Shortage: Ethics Law and Pragmatism (CUP 2011), co-edited with D Price and M. Quigley.

Alexandra Mullock is Lecturer in Law in the Centre for Social Ethics and Policy in the School of Law, University of Manchester. She joined the School of Law in 2011 after completing her PhD at Manchester. Alex’s research interests focus mainly on End-of-Life Law, the legitimacy of ethically contentious medical interventions and the regulation of health care professionals. She has published articles in internationally recognised journals and she has an forthcoming edited book to be published with Routledge, The Legitimacy of Medical Treatment: What Role for the Medical Exception?, with co-editor Sara Fovargue.



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