It seems that a recurring theme in our Recent Developments is the issue of property rights in tissue (see, for example, Stewart 2009; Richards, Madden, and Cockburn 2011; Giancaspro 2014). This has most commonly been associated with access to reproductive material and begins from the presumption of no property in tissue. A recent decision for the Superior Court of Justice, Ontario, whilst unsuccessful on largely procedural grounds, warrants a brief note because it adds to the general discourse on property in tissue and adopts a different approach. Piljak Estate v Abraham 2014 ONSC 2893 addressed the question of whether or not the family of a deceased person could access liver tissue for genetic testing. The property question arose because t...
Since the days of the body-snatchers, human bodies and their parts have been a valuable resource fo...
This article considers the legal consequences of recognising property rights in human tissue in rela...
If I am not a slave, nobody else owns me and I therefore must own myself. This is but philosophical ...
In Moore v. Regents of the University of California, the Supreme Court of California held that the h...
In a 2012 case from Canada, the Supreme Court of British Columbia held that sperm acquired and store...
The question of when property rights may arise in human body parts or bodily products remains contro...
Do you own your body? Advances in science and the development of genetic databases have given this q...
In disputes over the use and possession of the human body and its parts, there has been a marked rel...
The ownership of tissue samples donated for medical research is an ongoing subject of dispute. Some ...
Human tissue is used in an increasing number of medical and scientific contexts. Despite this, the l...
Until very recently the question of who owns embryonic or fetal tissue was of limited importance to ...
Biotechnology and the Challenge of Property addresses the question of how the advancement of propert...
Embryos are all over the news. According to the New York Times there are currently 400,000 frozen em...
The New York Court of Appeals found in 2006 that 'Coke's classic edict [that a corpse has no value] ...
Genetic researchers and medical practitioners often need to obtain access to stored human tissue wit...
Since the days of the body-snatchers, human bodies and their parts have been a valuable resource fo...
This article considers the legal consequences of recognising property rights in human tissue in rela...
If I am not a slave, nobody else owns me and I therefore must own myself. This is but philosophical ...
In Moore v. Regents of the University of California, the Supreme Court of California held that the h...
In a 2012 case from Canada, the Supreme Court of British Columbia held that sperm acquired and store...
The question of when property rights may arise in human body parts or bodily products remains contro...
Do you own your body? Advances in science and the development of genetic databases have given this q...
In disputes over the use and possession of the human body and its parts, there has been a marked rel...
The ownership of tissue samples donated for medical research is an ongoing subject of dispute. Some ...
Human tissue is used in an increasing number of medical and scientific contexts. Despite this, the l...
Until very recently the question of who owns embryonic or fetal tissue was of limited importance to ...
Biotechnology and the Challenge of Property addresses the question of how the advancement of propert...
Embryos are all over the news. According to the New York Times there are currently 400,000 frozen em...
The New York Court of Appeals found in 2006 that 'Coke's classic edict [that a corpse has no value] ...
Genetic researchers and medical practitioners often need to obtain access to stored human tissue wit...
Since the days of the body-snatchers, human bodies and their parts have been a valuable resource fo...
This article considers the legal consequences of recognising property rights in human tissue in rela...
If I am not a slave, nobody else owns me and I therefore must own myself. This is but philosophical ...