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Technology, Health, and Law in Life and Death: Before the Cradle to Beyond the Grave

Edited by: Neera Bhatia

ISBN13: 9781509978816
To be Published: December 2025
Publisher: Hart Publishing
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £85.00



This book brings together leading global scholars to examine the legal, ethical, and social implications of biotechnological innovations in healthcare throughout the lifecycle - from the potential of life being formed outside the womb to the possibility of life after death.

Biotechnological innovations in healthcare have extended the life span of human beings in the 21st century. Emerging health technologies have resulted in human beings living longer, and they have improved the quality of their lives and their deaths. What were once considered matters of science fiction have now become a reality in a burgeoning field of boundary-pushing advancements. However, emerging health technologies require careful regulation and ethical scrutiny. There must be a balance between what can be done and what should be done in technology, health and law.

This book uniquely takes the reader on a journey of the life cycle - from before the cradle to beyond the grave - of biotechnological innovations to better understand what healthcare of the present and future might hold. It examines how emerging health technologies are profoundly disrupting legal knowledge of life and death in the developed world.

The book makes a significant and original contribution to the field of health law and bioethics by adopting a socio-legal perspective in examining the legal, ethical, and social implications of technologies that create, sustain, and foster life and death.

Subjects:
Medical Law and Bioethics
Contents:
Introduction, Neera Bhatia (Deakin University, Australia)
1. Ectogestation and Reproductive Justice, Zoe Tongue (University of Leeds, UK)
2. The Sexual and Reproductive Health Revolution of FemTech will not be Sufficiently Regulated: The Current Regulatory Gaps in the Protection of FemTech Users, Manna Mostaghim (London School of Economics, UK)
3. When is a Stem Cell-Based Embryo Equivalent to a Natural Human Embryo? Julian Koplin (Monash University, Australia) and Neera Bhatia (Deakin University, Australia)
4. An NHS Medical Devices Information System: Legal and Ethical and Regulatory Challenges, Jean McHale (University of Birmingham, UK)
5. Parents, Children and Open-Source Artificial Pancreas: Morality in the Era of Healthcare Financialisation, Giles Birchley (University of Bristol, UK)
6. Neuroethics, Governance, and the Brain, Neuroethics, Rights, and the Brain, Nathan Higgins, Stephanie K Slack, John Gardner and Adrian Carter (Monash University, Australia)
7. Life after Death: Ethical, Legal and Social Implications of Cryonics, Emma Kowal and Neera Bhatia (Deakin University, Australia)
8. New Funerary Methods: Technological Innovation, Sustainability, and the Role of Law, Heather Conway and Gerard Kelly (Queen's University, Belfast, UK)
9. The Digital Afterlife - Grieving Digitally After Death, Matthew Groves (Deakin University, Australia) and Prue Vines (University of New South Wales, Australia)