The University of Sheffield
School of Law
Photo of Lynn Hagger, Lecturer

Lynn Hagger

Position: Lecturer
Email Address: L.E.Hagger@sheffield.ac.uk
Telephone: +44 (0)114 222 6851
Room No: AF07

Academic Profile

After careers in social work and legal practice, I became a legal academic with lectureships at the Universities of Manchester, Liverpool and now Sheffield. I have taught administrative/public law, contract, environmental and European law but I now teach Principles of Healthcare Law and Ethics, Regulating Healthcare and Torts at undergraduate level and on the Principles of Health Law and Policy and Vulnerable Patients in Healthcare Practice at postgraduate level. In parallel with these activities, I have been involved in the NHS for over 25 years, mostly as a non-executive director of acute hospital boards. I was Chairperson of Sheffield Children’s NHS Foundation Trust for nine years and currently serve as a Non-executive Director at Leeds Teaching NHS Trust. My research is focused in the field of healthcare law and ethics and my approach involves how using a human rights framework, empirical evidence, and my international and NHS experience can strengthen the rights of the individual citizen (and children in particular) in the healthcare setting. I also have an interest in how developing technologies should be regulated. I am part of a network of multi-disciplinary research collaborators in the national and international context, in particular the Northern Genetics Knowledge Park, the Institute of Human Genetics in Newcastle, TREAT-NMD (Translational Research in Europe – Assessment and Treatment of Neuromuscular Diseases) Ethics Committee, the EU Neuromics Ethics Committee and the University of Lubeck in Germany.

Qualifications

LLB (Hons.), Dip. LP, MA., University of Sheffield.

Teaching and Learning

I am a strong proponent of research-led and research-based teaching. This is reflected in my undergraduate and postgraduate healthcare law and ethics teaching which takes into account the realities of clinical practice in the NHS. It also addresses the challenges of regulating developing biotechnologies in the global context.

The modules I teach are:

Undergraduate Postgraduate and MA
Torts Law Principles of Health Law and Policy (Convenor)
Principles of Healthcare Law and Technology (Convenor) Vulnerable Patients in Healthcare Practice (Convenor)
Regulating Healthcare (Convenor)

Research Interests

Member of the Centre for the Study of Law in Society research cluster.

Areas of Research Supervision

Medical Law and Ethics

Key Publications

Hagger, L. and Woods, S. (2013) A Good Death? Law and Ethics in Practice edited collection. Abingdon: Ashgate Publishing

Woods, S., Hagger, L. and McCormack, P. (2012) Therapeutic Misconception: Hope, Trust and Misconception in Paediatric Research for Rare Diseases. Healthcare Analysis.

Rehmann-Sutter, C. and Hagger, L. (2011) Assisted Suicide by Organizations in England?’ Health Care Analysis.

Hagger, L. and Hagger-Johnson, G. (2011) Super kids: regulating the use of cognitive and psychological enhancements in children. Law, Innovation and Technology, 3(1), 137-166

Chico, V. and Hagger, L. (2011) The Mental Capacity Act 2005 and mature minors: wise legislation or a missed opportunity? Journal of Social Welfare and Family, 33(2), 157 - 168

Hagger, L. (2009) The Child as Vulnerable Patient: Protection and Empowerment, Abingdon: Ashgate

Recent Invited Papers and Keynote Lectures

‘Empowering Children in the UK Mental Health Setting’, 19th World Congress on Medical Law, Meceio, Brazil, 7-10 August 2012

Panel speaker, ‘Should Assisted Suicide be Legalised?’, The Exchange, Sheffield University Students’ Union, 27 March 2012 with Prof, S. Ahmedzai, Professor of Palliative Medicine in the University of Sheffield Department of Oncology and a member of the Commission on Assisted Dying; Dr. Andrew Fergusson, GP and a board member of the Care Not Killing campaign and Dominica Roberts, Chairman of the ProLife Alliance

Keynote speaker, ‘The Child as Patient: Competence and Decision-making’, Children and Mental Health Conference, Manchester Civil Justice Centre, 24 February 2012.

Keynote speaker, ‘What is different about paediatric trials?’, Children and Clinical Trials,, Nuffield Council of Bioethics international conference, 9 December 2011 (speakers included: Professor Søren Holm, Professor of Bioethics, University of Manchester and Dr Agnès Saint Raymond

Professional Activities and Recognition