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Drawing on Sir Ian Kennedy’s extensive experience in healthcare
law, ethics and public policy-making, this book explores vital
issues in the law surrounding healthcare and regulation. The book
contains a range of published and unpublished essays and speeches
with the addition of notes and commentaries by the author that
bring the pieces up to the present day. Those who want to
understand developments, from transplants to confidentiality, from
COVID-19 to public inquiries to regulation will find a rich seam of
rigorous, informed analysis. The author’s unique range of
experience allows him to share insights on a variety of issues;
from the conduct of the disgraced breast surgeon, Ian Paterson, to
research at Porton Down, to the economics of innovation in drug
development at NICE. His abiding interest in the welfare of
children informs his trenchant forensic examination of how children
fare in the NHS. Those involved in or with an interest in law,
moral philosophy, and public policy will find much food for
thought.
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Rekill (Hardcover)
Ian Kennedy Martin
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R802
Discovery Miles 8 020
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Newly resigned from the Welsh police to avoid being sacked
ex-detective Petroc Corrigan is hired to investigate a bizarre
murder in France with a background of the daily machinations of the
Bordeaux wine trade. He is soon to confront the unlikely pairing of
a psychopathic millionaire poet and his pet hitman. And also be
faced with bloody encounters with others as dangerous. He'll soon
have to learn that might can definitely become right, and wrong can
just as easily become right. There are two more Corrigan novels on
Lulu and Kindle. Ian Kennedy Martin is the creator of the Sweeney
and other T.V. series.
The second in the new 'War Picture Library' series showcasing the
finest combat comics illustrated by legendary and iconic artists.
Two true stories of aviation heroism and derring-do - 'Never Say
Die' and 'Steel Bats' - set during the Battle of Britain in 1940
and drawn by comics legend Ian Kennedy! A talented pilot who never
loses his determination to defend his country against immense
obstacles both technical and personal. A squadron undertakes
heart-stopping missions to combat the intense night-time assaults
of the Axis air force. Set against the backdrop of the Battle of
Britain comes an enthralling collection of aviation and heroism
featuring daredevil pilots and the lengths they go to stop the
German Luftwaffe attacking Britain.
In 2009, news broke that MPs had been claiming taxpayers' money to
pay for such excesses as a floating duck-house, moat-cleaning
services and 550 sacks of manure. The revelations shook Westminster
and compromised the voters' trust. Urgent action had to be taken.
Cue the establishment of the Independent Parliamentary Standards
Authority (IPSA), a regulator designed to scrutinise every claim
and hold MPs to account. Created from scratch and operating in a
world of rattled politicians accustomed to old habits, IPSA came up
against a series of obstacles, ranging from MPs who had never used
a computer to vicious online abuse. Ian Kennedy was the chairman of
IPSA for its first seven years, and was responsible for developing
it into an effective and transparent organisation. Ten years on, he
discusses his struggle to ensure the public's money was put to good
use, all the while being hounded by the press for not doing what
they wanted, and by MPs themselves for doing what they'd voted for
but didn't really intend. Cleaning Up the Mess describes the
bullying, bitterness and occasional kindness Kennedy encountered,
and how a thick skin and conviction in IPSA's purpose helped to
restore trust in politics and politicians.
This book brings together a wide cross-section of the author's work
in the field of medical law and ethics. Many of the articles have
appeared previously in journals, but all are updated. Some are
published here for the first time. Professor Kennedy, a former
Reith Lecturer and a well-known scholar and broadcaster, writes not
only authoritatively and informatively about the subject, but often
in a way that is provocative, controversial, and amusing. It is a
collection that will interest the lawyer with medico-legal
interests, and the doctor who wants to know more about the rights,
duties, and liabilities of his profession, the student of law or
medicine, and the layperson who follows developments in this
scientifically complex and morally contentious area of law.
Drawing on Sir Ian Kennedy's extensive experience in healthcare
law, ethics and public policy-making, this book explores vital
issues in the law surrounding healthcare and regulation. The book
contains a range of published and unpublished essays and speeches
with the addition of notes and commentaries by the author that
bring the pieces up to the present day. Those who want to
understand developments, from transplants to confidentiality, from
COVID-19 to public inquiries to regulation will find a rich seam of
rigorous, informed analysis. The author's unique range of
experience allows him to share insights on a variety of issues;
from the conduct of the disgraced breast surgeon, Ian Paterson, to
research at Porton Down, to the economics of innovation in drug
development at NICE. His abiding interest in the welfare of
children informs his trenchant forensic examination of how children
fare in the NHS. Those involved in or with an interest in law,
moral philosophy, and public policy will find much food for
thought.
A fascinating account of how the railway influenced more than a
century of art in Europe and America Steam locomotives gripped the
imagination when they first appeared in 19th-century Europe and
America. Aboard these great machines, passengers traveled at faster
speeds than ever before while watching the scenery transform itself
and take on new forms. Common notions of time and space were
forever changed. Through vivid illustrations and engaging texts,
The Railway: Art in the Age of Steam captures both the fear and
excitement of early train travel as it probes the artistic response
to steam locomotion within its social setting. Featuring paintings,
photography, prints, and posters, the book includes numerous
masterpieces by 19th- and 20th-century artists, including J. M. W.
Turner, Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Charles Sheeler, and Edward
Hopper. With its wide variety of themes-landscape painting, the
conquest of the West, Impressionism, issues of social class,
Modernism, the aesthetics of the machine, and environmental
concerns-this work promises an exhilarating journey for both train
and art enthusiasts and for anyone interested in one of the
industrial age's defining achievements. Published in association
with The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, and Walker Art
Gallery, National Museums Liverpool Exhibition Schedule: Walker Art
Gallery, National Museums Liverpool (April 18 - August 10, 2008)
The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City (September 13, 2008 -
January 18, 2009)
In the first of the three Sweeney novels written by the creator of
the TV series, Detective Inspector Jack Regan, expert at evading
the proper channels, insolent and insubordinate to his superiors,
exercises his usual trump card of cases solved with successful
convictions. When he is ordered to London airport to pick up
Lieutenant Ewing of the San Francisco and to cooperate with him in
finding a police killer believed to be in London, Regan, pursuing a
line of his own, finds the American an embarrassment and soon the
two men are engulfed in a dangerous clash of personalities. The
Lieutenant shoots first and asks questions - if at all -
afterwards. Regan finds himself involved in a case that grows into
something much more violent and sinister than he had envisaged.
This is the first of the three novels, 'Regan', 'The Manhattan
File', and 'The Deal of the Century', published at the time of the
original series. Ian Kennedy Martin is the creator of the Sweeney
and other T.V. series.
Principles of Medical Law is the leading practitioner text in its
field. Now in its fourth edition, it provides a comprehensive and
scholarly account of the common law and statutory provisions
governing healthcare provision in England and Wales. It offers an
authoritative and up-to-date account of medical law whilst also
seeking to set the law in context and critique its application. The
contributors include many of the leading academics and
practitioners working in the area of medical law today, who
together offer a balanced, reliable, and considered perspective.
The clear layout, accessible writing style, extensive referencing,
and detailed index make this an indispensable research tool for
practitioners and academics alike.
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