Regulating Autonomy
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These essays explore the nature and limits of individual autonomy in law policy and the work of regulatory agencies. The authors ask searching questions about the nature and scope of the regulation of 'private' lives - from intimacies personal relationships and domestic lives to reproduction. They question the extent to which the law does or should protect individual autonomy. Recent rapid advances in the development of new technologies particularly those concerned with human genetics and assisted reproduction have generated new questions - practical social legal and ethical - about how far the state should intervene in individual decision making. Is there an inevitable tension between individual liberty and the common good? How might a workable balance between the public and the private be struck? How indeed should we think about 'autonomy?' The essays explore the arguments used to create and maintain the boundaries of autonomy - for example the protection of the vulnerable public goods of various kinds and the maintenance of tradition and respect for cultural practices. The contributions address how those boundaries should be drawn and what interventions are justified.
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