Foreword, Emma Cave (Durham University, UK) Introduction, Neera Bhatia (Deakin University, Australia) Part I: Birth 1. Ectogestation and Reproductive Justice, Zoe L Tongue (University of Leeds, UK) 2. The Sexual and Reproductive Health Revolution of FemTech will not be Sufficiently Regulated: The Current Regulatory Gaps in the Protection of FemTech Users , Manna Mostaghim (London School of Economics, UK) 3. When is a Stem Cell-Based Embryo Model Equivalent to a Natural Human Embryo? Julian Koplin (Monash University, Australia) and Neera Bhatia (Deakin University, Australia) Part II: Life 4. An NHS Medical Devices Information System: Reconciling Patient Safety and Patient Choice?, Jean McHale (University of Birmingham, UK) 5. Parents, Children and Open-source Artificial Pancreas: Morality in the Era of Healthcare Financialisation, Giles Birchley (University of Bristol, UK) 6. Neuroethics, Governance, and the Brain, Nathan Higgins, Stephanie K Slack, John Gardner and Adrian Carter (Monash University, Australia) Part III: Death 7. Life after Death? The Ethical, Legal and Social Implications of Cryonics, Emma Kowal and Neera Bhatia (Deakin University, Australia) 8.
New Funerary Methods: Technological Innovation, Sustainability, and the Role of Law, Heather Conway and Gerard Kelly (Queen's University Belfast, UK) 9. The Digital Afterlife: Grieving Digitally After Death, Matthew Groves (Deakin University, Australia) and Prue Vines (University of New South Wales, Australia).