| …welcomed as a valuable and essential addition to a very contentious topic.
The processing, presentation and analysis of data and the development and arrangement of the content of the book are indicative of a thorough investigation and grasp of the topic, as well as a scientific dissemination of voluminous research material.
Although the book will be essential reading for lecturers, students, practitioners of medical law and health care professionals, it will also be an asset to any bookshelf.
P A Carsten, University of Pretoria
Stellenbosch Law Review
October 2001
This will be a very valuable book for the wealth of information it contains and the ease of acces to it that Jackson produces in her clear and concise writing style.
The narrative is well-informed and up-to-date. The author has produced a very interesting, comprehensive and accessible account of the law's involvement in reproductive choice and I believe that it is a valuable addition to the literature in this area.
Professor Sheila McLean, Glasgow University
Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law
October 2001
Emily Jacksons keenly awaited autonomy-based account of the regulation of contemporary reproductive practices was always likely to be a signal contribution to an emerging debate not always graced with careful or detailed research and argument. Sufficient of her earlier essays, however, presaged a rich and detailed analysis of the relationship between law, technology and reproduction that was likely to be scholarly and stimulating, argumentative and authoritative. Her book now published does not disappoint. Emily Jacksons richly researched, deftly written and elegantly argued thesis is a model which many scholars might be pleased to imitate although few will find it possible to emulate.
Derek Morgan
Medical Law Review
October 2001
I found the book to be well-written and that it developed many thought-provoking and interesting arguments. The author is to be congratulated in that she has obviously undertaken a great depth of research
it is certainly of great value as a work of further reference, or as a basic text for post-graduate students.
The price of the book (16.99 in paperback) offers excellent value for students of slender means
On the whole the book can be recommended: it offers good value for money, and raises some thought-provoking issues and questions.
Lynne Foxcroft, University of Huddersfield
The Law Teacher
October 2001
'Regulating Reproduction' is clearly a valuable addition to a growing literature. It is an accessible, well researched, and engaging work. The interdisciplinary approach is expertly carried off with law, ethics, and policy coming together in the best tradition of socio-legal scholarship. [] Each ot these features will make the text of interest and value to both academics and students.
Michael Thomson, Keele University
Journal of Law and Society
October 2001
Regulating Reproduction' is a useful, informative and thought-provoking book for anyone interested in the field of contemporary human reproduction and the law.
Emily Jackson is both engaging and engaged, making her writing style highly accessible.
'Regulating Reproduction' is something that should be on the bookshelf of every medical or family lawyer, and probably on that of anyone interested in the role of gender within law.
Kirsty Horsey
Feminist Legal Studies
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