European Law and New Health Technologies
Edited by Mark L Flear, Anne-Maree Farrell, Tamara K Hervey, and Thérèse Murphy
Author Information
Edited by Mark L Flear, Lecturer in Law, Queen's University Belfast, Anne-Maree Farrell, Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law, Monash University, Australia, Tamara K Hervey, Jean Monnet Professor of European Union Law, University of Sheffield School of Law, and Thérèse Murphy, Professor of Law and Critical Theory, University of Nottingham
Mark Flear is a Lecturer in Law at Queen's University of Belfast. He is also a member of the Northern Ireland DNA Database Governance Board. His works include the forthcoming title The Biopolitics of EU Public Health Governance: Cancer, HIV/AIDS and Pandemics.
Anne-Maree Farrell is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law, Monash University, Australia. Her research expertise lies broadly within the area of health law and policy, with a particular interest in the regulatory governance of human biological materials. Recent publications include The Politics of Blood: Ethics Innovation and the Regulation of Risk (2012) and Organ Shortage: Ethics Law and Pragmatism (co-edited with D. Price and M. Quigley, 2011).
Tamara Hervey is Jean Monnet Professor of EU Law at the University of Sheffield, UK. Her research and teaching interests are in the field of European Union social and constitutional law, in particular its application in health fields, social security and welfare. She works across disciplines, and considers law in the context of broader modes of regulation. She is interested in socio-legal theory and method, and legal research methodologies in general, in particular as applied to the law of the European Union. Her recent books include Health Law and the European Union (with J McHale, 2004), Health Systems Governance in Europe: The role of EU law and policy (with E Mossialos, G Permanand, and R Baeten, 2010), andResearch Methodologies in EU and International Law (with R Cryer, B Sokhi-Bulley, and A Bohm, 2011).
Thérèse Murphy is the Professor of Law and Critical Theory in the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of ?Nottingham. Her work focuses on human rights law and practice, and her publications include Civil Liberties Law: The Human Rights Act Era (2001), New Technologies and Human Rights (2009), and the forthcoming Health and Human Rights.
Contributors:
John Abraham, University of Sussex
Richard Ashcroft, Queen Mary University of London
Gordon Bache, University of Sheffield
Sian Beynon-Jones, University of York
Nik Brown, University of York
Courtney Davis, University of Sussex
Bärbel Dorbeck-Jung, Unversity of Twente
Anne-Maree Farrell, Monash University
Mark Flear, Queen's University Belfast
Sjef Gevers, University of Amsterdam
Tamara Hervey, University of Sheffield
Nils Hoppe, University of Hanover
Thérèse Murphy, University of Nottingham
Mónica Navarro-Michel, University of Barcelona
Rory O'Connell, Queen's University Belfast
Gearóid Ó'Cuinn, University of Nottingham
Amanda Odell-West, University of Manchester
Martyn Pickersgill, University of Edinburgh
Elen Stokes, Cardiff Law School
Keith Syrett, Bristol University
Ilke Turkmendag, Newcastle University
Amanda Warren-Jones, University of Sheffield
Regulators
Belen Crespo Sanchez-Eznarriaga, Director of the Spanish Medicines Agency
Emily Jackson, Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority
Mihalis Kritikos, formerly European Commission
Graeme Laurie, formerly chair of the UK Biobank Ethics and Governance Council
Jonathan Montgomery, Human Genetics Commission