Browsing Department of Law by Title
Now showing items 295-314 of 873
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FOETAL INJURY IN CLINCIAL TRIALS AND ACCOUNTABILITY TO THE CHILD ONCE BORN
(Brill Academic Publishers, 2016)Sponsors of clinical trials have excluded pregnant women from trial participation mainly because of the fear of legal liability for foetal injury. Yet, to prevent untested treatments exposing foetuses generally to unwarranted ... -
FOOD: CRIME, HARM AND REGULATION
(2024-09-01)We begin by outlining the nature of the global food industry – a complex network of activities relating to the supply and consumption of food products across the world which impacts significantly upon the health and indeed ... -
Form and Value in Law
(Taylor & Francis (Routledge), 2014) -
Foundations of Sovereign Authority
(Palgrave, 2018)As post-Renaissance Europe creates modern concepts of statehood and sovereignty, figures like Bodin, Grotius, and Hobbes undertake ‘constructive’, system-building theories of sovereign authority. Dramatists, in the meantime, ... -
Free movement of EU citizens and their family members
(2016-04-20)Free movement of EU citizens and their third country national family members is a matter of controversy among some member states. -
From Human Rights to a Politics of Care
Responding to claims that human rights have for too long dominated the imaginative space of emancipation, in this paper we aim to center stage the politics of care. After demonstrating the inadequacy of the so-called ... -
From Living Law to Global Legal Pluralism: Rethinking Traditions from a Century of Western Socio-Legal Studies
(Kobe University, 2016-10-19)This paper notes certain key landmarks in the modern history of Western sociology of law. Taken together, these map developments that have given socio-legal studies some of its most influential and powerful theoretical ... -
From monologue to dialogue - the relationship between UK courts and the European Court of Human Rights
(OUP/British Academy, 2013-04-18) -
FROM WEDNESBURY UNREASONABLENESS TO ACCOUNTABILITY FOR REASONABLENESS: HOW THE COURTS HAVE CONTRIBUTED TO MAKING RATIONING IN THE NHS MORE EXPLICIT
(Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2017-08-22)Over the last decades, rationing of medical treatment in the National Health Service (NHS) has moved from implicit to being increasingly explicit about what is being denied and about the procedures and reasons for such ...