Artificial womb technology and the significance of birth: why gestatelings are not newborns (or fetuses)
(2019)
Journal Article
Romanis, E. C. (2019). Artificial womb technology and the significance of birth: why gestatelings are not newborns (or fetuses). Journal of Medical Ethics, 45(11), 728-729. https://doi.org/10.1136/medethics-2019-105723
Outputs (1139)
What Would Ecological Climate Change Law Look Like?: Developing a Method for Analysing the International Climate Change Regime from an Ecological Perspective (2019)
Journal Article
Woolley, O. (2020). What Would Ecological Climate Change Law Look Like?: Developing a Method for Analysing the International Climate Change Regime from an Ecological Perspective. Review of European, Comparative & International Environmental Law, 29(1), 76-85. https://doi.org/10.1111/reel.12310Statements and commitments made in the climate change treaties record the desire of their parties to preserve ecosystem functionality and situations that depend on this as an outcome of their collective response to global warming. Despite this, littl... Read More about What Would Ecological Climate Change Law Look Like?: Developing a Method for Analysing the International Climate Change Regime from an Ecological Perspective.
Think of the Children: Liability for Non-disclosure of Information Post-Montgomery (2019)
Journal Article
Cave, E., & Purshouse, C. (2020). Think of the Children: Liability for Non-disclosure of Information Post-Montgomery. Medical Law Review, 28(2), 270-292. https://doi.org/10.1093/medlaw/fwz023In 2015 the Supreme Court in Montgomery v Lanarkshire Health Board handed down a landmark decision on informed consent to medical treatment, heralding a legal shift to a more patient-centred approach. Montgomery, and the extensive commentary that has... Read More about Think of the Children: Liability for Non-disclosure of Information Post-Montgomery.
Court-authorised obstetric intervention: insight and capacity, a tale of loss (2019)
Book Chapter
Halliday, S. (2019). Court-authorised obstetric intervention: insight and capacity, a tale of loss. In C. Pickles, & H. Jonathan (Eds.), Childbirth, Vulnerability and Law: Exploring Issues of Violence and Control (178 - 203). (1). Routledge
Leaving women behind: The application of evidence-based guidelines, law, and obstetric violence by omission (2019)
Book Chapter
Pickles, C. (2019). Leaving women behind: The application of evidence-based guidelines, law, and obstetric violence by omission. In C. Pickles, & J. Herring (Eds.), Childbirth, vulnerability and law: exploring issues of violence and control (140-160). (New Edition). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429443718
Childbirth, Vulnerability and Law (2019)
Book
Pickles, C., & Herring, J. (Eds.). (2019). Childbirth, Vulnerability and Law. Routledge
Using Harry Potter to enhance the critical appreciation of law or questioning whether the rule of law is as much a reality as the crumpled horned snorkack (2019)
Book Chapter
Halliday, S., & Jarvis, C. (2019). Using Harry Potter to enhance the critical appreciation of law or questioning whether the rule of law is as much a reality as the crumpled horned snorkack. In C. Jarvis, & P. Gouthro (Eds.), Professional Education with Fiction Media: Imagination for Engagement and Empathy in Learning (93 - 106). (1). Springer Verlag
The Patient in Free Movement Law: Medical History, Diagnosis and Prognosis (2019)
Journal Article
Van Leeuwen, B. (2019). The Patient in Free Movement Law: Medical History, Diagnosis and Prognosis. The Cambridge yearbook of European legal studies, 21, 162-186. https://doi.org/10.1017/cel.2019.5Free movement of patients has been criticised from the moment that the first patient cases reached the CJEU. The moving patient supposedly increases consumerism, reduces national solidarity and has a negative impact on the quality of healthcare provi... Read More about The Patient in Free Movement Law: Medical History, Diagnosis and Prognosis.
Cold winds and warm attachments: Interrogating the personal attachment to neoliberal work and economy (2019)
Journal Article
Musilek, K., Jamie, K., & McKie, L. (2020). Cold winds and warm attachments: Interrogating the personal attachment to neoliberal work and economy. Work, Employment and Society, 34(3), 514-525. https://doi.org/10.1177/0950017019856798The question of personal attachment to work in neoliberalism is subject to debate. Some scholars postulate that personal attachment to work based on durability, collectivity and predictability is weakening because of changes in its organisation; work... Read More about Cold winds and warm attachments: Interrogating the personal attachment to neoliberal work and economy.
Punitive and Preventive Justice in an Era of Profiling, Smart Prediction and Practical Preclusion: Three Key Questions (2019)
Journal Article
Beyleveld, D., & Brownsword, R. (2019). Punitive and Preventive Justice in an Era of Profiling, Smart Prediction and Practical Preclusion: Three Key Questions. International Journal of Law in Context, 15(2), 198-218. https://doi.org/10.1017/s1744552319000120In the context of a technology-driven algorithmic approach to criminal justice, this paper responds to the following three questions: (1) what reasons are there for treating liberal values and human rights as guiding for punitive justice; (2) is prev... Read More about Punitive and Preventive Justice in an Era of Profiling, Smart Prediction and Practical Preclusion: Three Key Questions.
Challenging the ‘Born Alive’ Threshold: Fetal Surgery, Artificial Wombs, and the English Approach to Legal Personhood (2019)
Journal Article
Romanis, E. C. (2020). Challenging the ‘Born Alive’ Threshold: Fetal Surgery, Artificial Wombs, and the English Approach to Legal Personhood. Medical Law Review, 28(1), 93-123. https://doi.org/10.1093/medlaw/fwz014
How patent law reform can improve affordability and accessibility of medicines in South Africa: Four medicine case studies (2019)
Journal Article
Tomlinson, C., Waterhouse, C., Hu, Y., Meyer, S., & Moyo, H. (2019). How patent law reform can improve affordability and accessibility of medicines in South Africa: Four medicine case studies. South African Medical Journal, 109(6), 387-391. https://doi.org/10.7196/samj.2019.v109i6.14001South Africa (SA) is in the process of amending its patent laws. Since its 2011 inception, Fix the Patent Laws, a coalition of 40 patient groups, has advocated for reform of SA’s patent laws to improve affordability of medicines in the country. Build... Read More about How patent law reform can improve affordability and accessibility of medicines in South Africa: Four medicine case studies.
Managing the pious cadaver: Whole body donation and Anatomy in Sri Lanka (2019)
Book Chapter
Simpson, B. (2019). Managing the pious cadaver: Whole body donation and Anatomy in Sri Lanka. In L. Van Ryn, B. Nansen, M. Gibbs, & T. Kohn (Eds.), Residues of death : disposal refigured. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429456404-11
The Netherlands: The 2018 Agreement between The Ocean Cleanup and the Netherlands (2019)
Journal Article
Roland Holst, R. J. (2019). The Netherlands: The 2018 Agreement between The Ocean Cleanup and the Netherlands. The International Journal of Marine and Coastal Law, 34(2), 351-371. https://doi.org/10.1163/15718085-13421090
Why the Elective Caesarean Lottery is Ethically Impermissible (2019)
Journal Article
Romanis, E. C. (2019). Why the Elective Caesarean Lottery is Ethically Impermissible. Health Care Analysis, 27(4), 249-268. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10728-019-00370-0
Tacticians, Stewards, and Professionals: The Politics of Publishing Select Committee Legal Advice (2019)
Journal Article
Yong, B., Davies, G., & Leston‐Bandeira, C. (2019). Tacticians, Stewards, and Professionals: The Politics of Publishing Select Committee Legal Advice. Journal of Law and Society, 46(3), 367-395. https://doi.org/10.1111/jols.12153At Westminster, there are increasing pressures on select committees to publish in‐house legal advice. We suggest that examining the process of deciding to publish provides useful insights into the provision, reception, and use of legal advice, and th... Read More about Tacticians, Stewards, and Professionals: The Politics of Publishing Select Committee Legal Advice.
The knowledge gap between intended and attained curriculum in Ethiopian teacher education: identifying challenges for future development (2019)
Journal Article
Alemu, M., Kind, V., Tadesse, M., Michael, K., Kind, P., & Rajab, T. (2021). The knowledge gap between intended and attained curriculum in Ethiopian teacher education: identifying challenges for future development. Compare: A Journal of Comparative and International Education, 51(1), 81-98. https://doi.org/10.1080/03057925.2019.1593107This investigation of physics teacher education in Ethiopia reveals a significant gap between the physics knowledge of pre-service teachers (PSTs) attained during training and that of the intended curriculum setting out expectations for their knowled... Read More about The knowledge gap between intended and attained curriculum in Ethiopian teacher education: identifying challenges for future development.
Monitoring practical science in schools and colleges, higher education data 2016-2018 (2019)
Data
Cramman, H., Kind, V., Kind, P., Lyth, A., Gray, H., Younger, K., …Coe, R. (2019). Monitoring practical science in schools and colleges, higher education data 2016-2018. [Dataset]. https://doi.org/10.5255/ukda-sn-853459
Market Access, The New Approach And Private Law (2019)
Journal Article
Van Leeuwen, B. (2019). Market Access, The New Approach And Private Law. European Review of Private Law, 27(2), 269-292In James Elliott and Schmitt, the ECJ refused to extend the scope of application of European standards adopted under the New Approach to private law disputes. This article argues that the ECJ’s judgments were based on a static interpretation of the c... Read More about Market Access, The New Approach And Private Law.
Nature's Indifference (2019)
Journal Article
James, S. P. (2019). Nature's Indifference. Environmental Ethics, 41(2), 115-128. https://doi.org/10.5840/enviroethics201941212Contrary to what writers such as Hans Jonas and Val Plumwood suggest, much of nature is indifferent to human interests. Mountains, glaciers, sun-baked salt pans—such entities care neither about what interests us humans nor about what is objectively i... Read More about Nature's Indifference.