Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Introduction

Electronic data

  • 0_introduction

    Accepted author manuscript, 282 KB, PDF document

    Available under license: None

View graph of relations

Introduction

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Forthcoming

Standard

Introduction. / Williams, Nicola; Hammond-Browning, Natasha.
International Legal and Ethical Perspectives on Uterus Transplantation. ed. / Natasha Hammond-Browning; Nicola J. Williams. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2024. (Elgar Studies in Health and the Law).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Williams, N & Hammond-Browning, N 2024, Introduction. in N Hammond-Browning & NJ Williams (eds), International Legal and Ethical Perspectives on Uterus Transplantation. Elgar Studies in Health and the Law, Edward Elgar, Cheltenham.

APA

Williams, N., & Hammond-Browning, N. (in press). Introduction. In N. Hammond-Browning, & N. J. Williams (Eds.), International Legal and Ethical Perspectives on Uterus Transplantation (Elgar Studies in Health and the Law). Edward Elgar.

Vancouver

Williams N, Hammond-Browning N. Introduction. In Hammond-Browning N, Williams NJ, editors, International Legal and Ethical Perspectives on Uterus Transplantation. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. 2024. (Elgar Studies in Health and the Law).

Author

Williams, Nicola ; Hammond-Browning, Natasha. / Introduction. International Legal and Ethical Perspectives on Uterus Transplantation. editor / Natasha Hammond-Browning ; Nicola J. Williams. Cheltenham : Edward Elgar, 2024. (Elgar Studies in Health and the Law).

Bibtex

@inbook{96755dc4a2b84e228cad7a96862d224f,
title = "Introduction",
abstract = "The first birth following uterus transplantation (UTx) hit the headlines in 2014. Born in October 2014 as part of a clinical trial at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Sweden, the baby, known as Vincent (from the Latin, {\textquoteleft}to conquer{\textquoteright}), was conceived after his mother received a uterus donated by a family friend in 2013. While the first to be born, Vincent was not the last, and a further nine births have now occurred as part of the Swedish trial followed by dozens more from trials across the globe. Ten years on, and as the procedure is finessed and exported around the globe, it is time to reflect on the development of UTx and its future as a treatment for infertility caused by an absent or non-functional uterus. We therefore present here a collection of different legal and ethical perspectives on the challenges posed by UTx contributed to by experts from across the globe. This edited collection is for anyone with an interest in the legal and ethical issues that uterine transplantation raises. Due to the unique nature of UTx, many different legal and ethical questions arise. We appreciate that not everyone will be familiar with UTx so here we provide readers with an introduction to UTx including a brief history of its development, and a summary of the process of UTx (from initial enquiry through to removal). We then move on to summarise the sections of the edited collection and the subjects of the individual chapters in more depth as well as some of the overarching questions they raise. ",
author = "Nicola Williams and Natasha Hammond-Browning",
year = "2024",
month = aug,
day = "31",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781803920481",
series = "Elgar Studies in Health and the Law",
publisher = "Edward Elgar",
editor = "Natasha Hammond-Browning and Williams, {Nicola J.}",
booktitle = "International Legal and Ethical Perspectives on Uterus Transplantation",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Introduction

AU - Williams, Nicola

AU - Hammond-Browning, Natasha

PY - 2024/8/31

Y1 - 2024/8/31

N2 - The first birth following uterus transplantation (UTx) hit the headlines in 2014. Born in October 2014 as part of a clinical trial at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Sweden, the baby, known as Vincent (from the Latin, ‘to conquer’), was conceived after his mother received a uterus donated by a family friend in 2013. While the first to be born, Vincent was not the last, and a further nine births have now occurred as part of the Swedish trial followed by dozens more from trials across the globe. Ten years on, and as the procedure is finessed and exported around the globe, it is time to reflect on the development of UTx and its future as a treatment for infertility caused by an absent or non-functional uterus. We therefore present here a collection of different legal and ethical perspectives on the challenges posed by UTx contributed to by experts from across the globe. This edited collection is for anyone with an interest in the legal and ethical issues that uterine transplantation raises. Due to the unique nature of UTx, many different legal and ethical questions arise. We appreciate that not everyone will be familiar with UTx so here we provide readers with an introduction to UTx including a brief history of its development, and a summary of the process of UTx (from initial enquiry through to removal). We then move on to summarise the sections of the edited collection and the subjects of the individual chapters in more depth as well as some of the overarching questions they raise.

AB - The first birth following uterus transplantation (UTx) hit the headlines in 2014. Born in October 2014 as part of a clinical trial at Sahlgrenska University Hospital in Sweden, the baby, known as Vincent (from the Latin, ‘to conquer’), was conceived after his mother received a uterus donated by a family friend in 2013. While the first to be born, Vincent was not the last, and a further nine births have now occurred as part of the Swedish trial followed by dozens more from trials across the globe. Ten years on, and as the procedure is finessed and exported around the globe, it is time to reflect on the development of UTx and its future as a treatment for infertility caused by an absent or non-functional uterus. We therefore present here a collection of different legal and ethical perspectives on the challenges posed by UTx contributed to by experts from across the globe. This edited collection is for anyone with an interest in the legal and ethical issues that uterine transplantation raises. Due to the unique nature of UTx, many different legal and ethical questions arise. We appreciate that not everyone will be familiar with UTx so here we provide readers with an introduction to UTx including a brief history of its development, and a summary of the process of UTx (from initial enquiry through to removal). We then move on to summarise the sections of the edited collection and the subjects of the individual chapters in more depth as well as some of the overarching questions they raise.

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9781803920481

T3 - Elgar Studies in Health and the Law

BT - International Legal and Ethical Perspectives on Uterus Transplantation

A2 - Hammond-Browning, Natasha

A2 - Williams, Nicola J.

PB - Edward Elgar

CY - Cheltenham

ER -