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Imogen Goold CUF Lecturer Imogen Goold studied Law and Modern History at the University of Tasmania, Australia, receiving her PhD in 2005. Her doctoral research explored the use of property law to regulate human body parts. She also received a Masters degree in Bioethics from the University of Monash in 2005.
From 1999, she was a research member of the Centre for Law and Genetics, where she published on surrogacy laws, legal constraints on access to infertility treatments and proprietary rights in human tissue.
In 2002, she took up as position as a Legal Officer at the Australian Law Reform Commission, working on the inquiries into Genetic Information Privacy and Gene Patenting. After leaving the ALRC in 2004, she worked briefly at the World Health Organisation, researching the provision of genetic medical services in developing countries. She is now working on a DPhil in the History of Medicine, examining the impact of moral arguments on the regulation of IVF.
She is presently writing a book based on her work on body part ownership and is co-editing a collection, with Catherine Kelly, on the historical interaction of legal regulation and medical practice.
All | Recent | Selected Publications sorted by selection | sort by year I Goold, 'Sounds Suspiciously like Property Treatment: Does Human Tissue Fit within the Common Law Concept of Property?' (2006) 7 UTS Law Review/Santa Clara Journal of International Law, Special joint issue I Goold, 'Should Older and Postmenopausal Women Have Access to Assisted Reproductive Technology?' (2005) 24(1) Monash Bioethics Review 27-46 I Goold, 'Tissue Donation: Ethical Guidance and Legal Enforceability' (2004) 11(3) Journal of Law and Medicine 331–40 I Goold, 'Surrogacy: Is There a Case for Legal Prohibition?' (2004) 12(2) Journal of Law and Medicine 205-16 Correspondence address: St Anne's College, Woodstock Road, |
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