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Kate Cregan [14]K. Cregan [1]
  1.  23
    Regulating Ethics in Australian Healthcare Research.Kate Cregan - 2012 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 21 (3):384-390.
  2.  21
    Early Modern Anatomy and the Queen's Body Natural: The Sovereign Subject.Kate Cregan - 2007 - Body and Society 13 (2):47-66.
    In March 1603 the mortal remains of Queen Elizabeth I, against her stated wishes, were ‘opened’ to enable their temporary preservation until arrangements for her funeral could be completed. That post-mortem office was performed by members of the Worshipful Company of Barber-Surgeons of London, to whom her father had first granted a royal warrant to retrieve executed felons from the public gallows for their ‘better learning’ through lectures in anatomical dissection. In this article, portraiture of Elizabeth that appeals to the (...)
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  3.  31
    Sex Definitions and Gender Practices.Kate Cregan - 2014 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 23 (3):319-325.
    In recent years the Australian parliament has been considering the rights to protection from discrimination of intersex and gender identity disorder people. In 2013 such protections were made law in the amendment to the Sex Discrimination Act 1984, which in turn has influenced Senate inquiries into the medical treatment of intersex people. This year’s Australian report describes the purview and the potential ramifications of the inquiry of the Senate Standing Committees on Community Affairs, published in October 2013, into the involuntary (...)
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  4.  39
    Teaching the Anatomical Body in Seventeenth-Century London.Kate Cregan - 2010 - Medicine Studies 2 (1):21-36.
    This article addresses the pedagogical practices of the Worshipful Company of Barber-Surgeons of London during the seventeenth century. As artisans—trained by apprenticeship—their teaching and learning was embedded in the embodied actions performed in their anatomy theatre. The Barber-Surgeons held regular public anatomies for the benefit and ‘greater learning’ of the masters and apprentices of the Company, performed on the bodies of up to four felons per annum granted to them by the sovereign. The space in which these anatomies were performed (...)
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  5.  15
    Who Do You Think You Are?Kate Cregan - 2013 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 22 (3):232-237.
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