Professor Sara Fovargue
School of Law
Professor of Law
Director of Academic Staff Development
Deputy Chair of the University Research Ethics Committee
+44 114 222 6794
Full contact details
School of Law
AF24
Bartolomé House
Winter Street
Sheffield
S3 7ND
- Profile
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I joined the School of Law at the University of Sheffield in January 2022, having previously been Professor of Law at Lancaster University. I have also taught at the Universities of Manchester and Newcastle.
I was the first in my family to attend university. Having wanted to be a barrister (specialising in medical malpractice) since I was about 14, I realised while I was studying at the Inns of Court School of Law that a career at the Bar was not for me. I completed the academic stage to qualify as a barrister and then opted to start work on my PhD rather than to complete a pupillage.
I have been teaching and researching issues relating to health law and ethics, and family law (particularly relating to children) for over 20 years and I am passionate about these subjects. I have also taught Criminal Law, English Legal Systems/Legal Methods, and Gender and the Law.
- Qualifications
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- Non-practising barrister
- PhD, University of Manchester
- LLB(Hons) Law, University of Leicester
- Research interests
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Health care law and ethics generally - specifically:
- Consent and Capacity
- Decision Making for the 'Vulnerable'
- Risk and Regulation
- Clinical Research Involving Human and Non-human Animals
- Developing and Emerging Biotechnologies (such as xenotransplantation)
- Reproduction and Reproductive Technologies
- Organ Donation and Transplantation
- Conscientious Objection
Family law:
- Parents, Parenthood and Reproductive Technologies
- Children and Health
- Children and Childhood
- Publications
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Books
Edited books
Journal articles
- . Medical Law Review, 32(4), 441-443.
- . BMC Medical Ethics, 25.
- . Medical Law Review, 30(4), 581-583.
- . Medical Law Review.
- . International Journal of Pharmacy Practice.
- In whose best interests? Childbirth choices and other health decisions. Law Quarterly Review, 137, 604-629.
- . Medical Law Review, 29(1), 1-2.
- . American Journal of Bioethics, 21(8), 34-37.
- . BMJ Open, 11(6).
- . Journal of Medical Ethics, 46(11), 715-716.
- . Medical Law Review, 28(4), 781-793.
- . New Bioethics, 25(3), 203-206.
- . New Bioethics, 25(3), 221-235.
- . Journal of Trafficking and Human Exploitation, 1(2), 143-160.
- . Medical Law Review, 24(4), 544-570.
- . Medical Law Review, 24(1), 34-58.
- . Medical Law Review, 23(2), 221-241.
- . Medical Law Review, 23(2), 173-176.
- . Medical Law International, 13(1), 6-31.
- Doctrinal incoherence or practical problem? Minor parents consenting to their offspring's medical treatment and involvement in research in England and Wales. Child and Family Law Quarterly, 25(1), 1-18.
- . Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 22(2), 181-191.
- . European Journal of Health Law, 20(2), 231-239.
- . Medical Law Review, 20(2), 189-190.
- . Medical Law Review, 20(1), 6-7.
- . Clinical Ethics, 6(4), 162-166.
- . Clinical Ethics, 6(3), 117-121.
- . Clinical Ethics, 6(2), 64-67.
- . Clinical Ethics, 6(1), 11-14.
- . Clinical Ethics, 5(4), 180-183.
- . Clinical Ethics, 5(3), 122-124.
- . Medical Law Review, 18(3), 302-329.
- . Journal of Medical Ethics, 36(8), 494-497.
- . Clinical Ethics, 5(2), 63-66.
- . Clinical Ethics, 5(1), 1-2.
- . Clinical Ethics, 5(1), 13-15.
- . Clinical Ethics, 4(3), 119-124.
- . Clinical Ethics, 4(1), 6-11.
- . Medical Law Review, 16(3), 458-464.
- . Clinical Ethics, 2(1), 22-22.
- . Clinical Ethics, 2(2), 55-55.
- . Clinical Ethics, 1(2), 85-85.
- . Clinical Ethics, 1(3), 138-138.
- . Clinical Ethics, 1(1), 26-32.
- . Clinical Ethics, 1(1), 21-21.
- . Legal Studies, 25(3), 404-430.
- . Medical Law Review, 13(1), 131-135.
- . Liverpool Law Review, 26(2), 125-147.
- . The Journal of Adult Protection, 5(1), 30-34.
- . Res Publica, 7(2), 183-187.
- . Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, 20(4), 421-437.
- . Medical Law Review, 6(3), 265-296.
- Medical law. Journal of Social Welfare and Family Law, 20(4), 427-437.
- Delivering compassionate NHS healthcare: a qualitative study exploring the ethical implications of resetting NHS maternity and paediatric services following the acute phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. Social Science and Medicine.
- An update on the ethical, legal, and technical challenges of translating xenotransplantation. Journal of Medical Ethics.
- . Health and Quality of Life Outcomes, 21(1).
- . The Modern Law Review, 65(2), 290-303.
- . Medical Law Review, 15(2), 176-219.
- . Medical Law Review, 14(3), 434-442.
Chapters
- Relationships were a casualty when pandemic ethics and everyday clinical ethics collided In Redhead C & Smallman M (Ed.), Governance, Democracy and Ethics in Crisis-Decision-making The Pandemic and Beyond Manchester: Manchester University Press.
- Introduction In Fovargue S & Purshouse C (Ed.), Leading Works in Health Law and Ethics (pp. 1-8). London: Routledge.
- , Leading Works in Health Law and Ethics (pp. 1-8).
- Preserving the therapeutic alliance: Court intervention and experimental treatment requests In Goold I, Herring J & Auckland C (Ed.), Parental Rights, Best Interests and Significant Harms: Medical Decision-Making on Behalf of Children Post-Great Ormond Street Hospital v Gard (pp. 153-176). Oxford: Hart.
- Xenotransplantation In den Exter A (Ed.), European Health Law (pp. 419-441). Maklu-Uitgevers
- Ethical Judgment on St George's Healthcare NHS Trust v S [1998] 3 All ER 673 In Smith S, Coggon J, Hobson C, Huxtable R, McGuinness S, Miola J & Neal M (Ed.), Ethical Judgments: Re-writing Medical Law (pp. 235-240). Oxford: Hart.
- Judgment 2-St George's Healthcare NHS Trust v S [1999] Fam 26, ETHICAL JUDGMENTS: RE-WRITING MEDICAL LAW (pp. 235-240).
- , The Legitimacy of Medical Treatment: What Role for the Medical Exception? (pp. 1-11).
- , Pioneering Healthcare Law: Essays in Honour of Margaret Brazier (pp. 243-254).
- Transforming wrong into right : What is 'proper medical treatment'? (pp. 12-31).
- Introduction In Fovargue S & Mullock A (Ed.), The Legitimacy of Medical Treatment: What Role for the Medical Exception? (pp. 1-11). Routledge
- Exposing the limits of the law? Biotechnological challenges to global health In Freeman M, Sarah H & Belinda Bennett (Ed.), Law and Global Health (pp. 394-418). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- , Bioethics, Medicine and the Criminal Law (pp. 140-156). Cambridge University Press
- La investigación embrionaria humana en Reino Unido: ¿una isla en Europa? In Garcia San Jose D (Ed.), Marco Jurídico Eurpeo Relativo a la Investigación Biomédica en Transferencia Nuclear y Reprogramación Celular (pp. 157-176). Thomson Reuters
- , Leading Works in Health Law and Ethics (pp. 148-163). Taylor & Francis
- , Leading Works in Health Law and Ethics (pp. 1-8). Taylor & Francis
- Integrating feminisms’ perspectives into the legal curriculum: Feminist Perspectives on Health Care Law In Fovargue S & Purshouse C (Ed.), Leading Works in Health Law and Ethics Routledge
Reports
- Pharmacists' perception of ethical conflict and professional guidance in light of the revised General Pharmaceutical Council Standards of Conduct, Ethics and Performance
- Research Briefing: Pharmacists' perceptions of ethical conflict and professional guidance
Preprints
- Research group
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I would be happy to supervise students in the following subjects:
- Health Law and Ethics
- Family Law - especially relating to children and health.
- Grants
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Title/Description: The Future of Human Reproduction: New Agendas and Methods for the Humanities and Social Science
- Awarding Body: Wellcome
- People Involved: Professor Stephen Wilkinson (PI, Lancaster University); Dr Kirsty Dunn (CI, Lancaster University); Professor Sharon Rushton (CI, Lancaster University); Professor Elena Semino (CI, Lancaster University); Dr Emmanuel Tsekleves (CI, Lancaster University); Dr Nicola Williams (CI, Lancaster University)
- Years Funded for: May 2022-August 2025
- Amount Awarded (£): 1,019,767
Title/Description: When pandemic and everyday ethics collide: Supporting ethical decision-making in maternity care and paediatrics during the Covid-19 pandemic
- Awarding Body: UKRI/AHRC Covid-19 Rapid Response funding
- People Involved: Dr Lucy Frith (PI, University of Manchester); Dr Paul Baines (CI, University of Warwick); Dr Anna Chiumento (CI, University of Liverpool); Professor Heather Draper (CI, University of Warwick)
- Years Funded for: 2020-2021
- Amount Awarded (£): 258,812
Title/Description: Uterus transplantation: Law, ethics, patients and policy
- Awarding Body: ESRC IAA
- People Involved: Professor Stephen Wilkinson (Lancaster University); Dr Laura O'Donovan (Lancaster University); Dr Nicola Williams (Lancaster University)
- Years Funded for: 2021
- Amount Awarded (£): 14,180
- Teaching interests
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- Health Care Law and Ethics
- Family Law (especially relating to children)
- Teaching activities
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The modules I teach are:
Undergraduate
- Children and the Law
- Family Law
- Principles of Healthcare Law and Ethics
Postgraduate
- PhD Legal Research Methods
- Professional activities and memberships
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- Joint Editor-in-Chief, Medical Law Review.
- Member of the AHRC Peer Review College.
- Member of the SLS EDI Committee.
- Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.
- External ethics adviser on Children Palliative Care Outcome Scale (C-POS), funded by European Research Council.
- Member the Children’s Health Ethics and Law Special Interest Group (CHELSIG).
Links