The recent case of Evans v United Kingdom1 documents a personal tragedy for Natallie Evans and an unenviable moral dilemma for her former partner, Howard Johnston, but for lawyers and academic commentators the decisions of the courts in the case have also presented a rare opportunity to analyse the operation of human rights provisions in the arena of what were once called ‘new reproductive technologies’, and—as will be demonstrated here—to build on this analysis to reappraise wider debates about the rights and relationships surrounding reproduction
A number of disputes have arisen in recent years over the status of non-transferred embryos cryopres...
In this chapter we consider the role of the law in determining maternal responsibility for foetal we...
Reproductive autonomy has been at the heart of culture clashes across the world for decades. Judicia...
The recent case of Evans v United Kingdom1 documents a personal tragedy for Natallie Evans and an un...
This note assesses the controversial case of Evans v UK by attempting to make sense of the sympathy ...
The Evans decisions are important as the first major European contributions to the growing global le...
In this paper I critique aspects of the law relating to in vitro fertilisation (‘IVF’) treatment in ...
During the late 1990s and early 2000s, an unprecedented story unfolded in the UK media involving a y...
Assisted reproductive technology encompasses methods of achieving pregnancy by artificial or partial...
A Woman’s Right to Motherhood?In 2000, a 29 year-old woman, Natallie Evans, and her partner, Howard ...
In Evans, both the U.K. High Court and Court of Appeal upheld Howard Johnston’s right to refuse Nata...
Original article can be found at: http://www.herts.ac.uk/courses/schools-of-study/law/hertfordshire-...
The Human Rights Act 1998 has sparked a rights revolution in the UK with the incorporation into dome...
Relevant to students, academics and practitioners across the globe, this original volume highlights ...
Whittington Hospital NHS Trust v XX (XX) turned on whether the courts should fund the creation of ch...
A number of disputes have arisen in recent years over the status of non-transferred embryos cryopres...
In this chapter we consider the role of the law in determining maternal responsibility for foetal we...
Reproductive autonomy has been at the heart of culture clashes across the world for decades. Judicia...
The recent case of Evans v United Kingdom1 documents a personal tragedy for Natallie Evans and an un...
This note assesses the controversial case of Evans v UK by attempting to make sense of the sympathy ...
The Evans decisions are important as the first major European contributions to the growing global le...
In this paper I critique aspects of the law relating to in vitro fertilisation (‘IVF’) treatment in ...
During the late 1990s and early 2000s, an unprecedented story unfolded in the UK media involving a y...
Assisted reproductive technology encompasses methods of achieving pregnancy by artificial or partial...
A Woman’s Right to Motherhood?In 2000, a 29 year-old woman, Natallie Evans, and her partner, Howard ...
In Evans, both the U.K. High Court and Court of Appeal upheld Howard Johnston’s right to refuse Nata...
Original article can be found at: http://www.herts.ac.uk/courses/schools-of-study/law/hertfordshire-...
The Human Rights Act 1998 has sparked a rights revolution in the UK with the incorporation into dome...
Relevant to students, academics and practitioners across the globe, this original volume highlights ...
Whittington Hospital NHS Trust v XX (XX) turned on whether the courts should fund the creation of ch...
A number of disputes have arisen in recent years over the status of non-transferred embryos cryopres...
In this chapter we consider the role of the law in determining maternal responsibility for foetal we...
Reproductive autonomy has been at the heart of culture clashes across the world for decades. Judicia...