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2023

Journal Article

Cryopreservation and the death of legal personhood

Falconer, Kate (2023). Cryopreservation and the death of legal personhood. Mortality. doi: 10.1080/13576275.2023.2230906

Cryopreservation and the death of legal personhood

2022

Journal Article

Australian Burial Law 25 Years on from Smith v Tamworth City Council

Falconer, Kate (2022). Australian Burial Law 25 Years on from Smith v Tamworth City Council. Australian Law Journal, 96 (8), 581-594.

Australian Burial Law 25 Years on from Smith v Tamworth City Council

2021

Journal Article

The right to possession of the body of the deceased: a history

Falconer, Kate (2021). The right to possession of the body of the deceased: a history. Law and History, 8 (1), 1-25.

The right to possession of the body of the deceased: a history

2021

Journal Article

Trusts over cremated ashes

Falconer, Kate (2021). Trusts over cremated ashes. Journal of Equity, 15, 283-305.

Trusts over cremated ashes

2020

Journal Article

Reconceptualising the law of the dead by expanding the interests of the living

Falconer, Kate (2020). Reconceptualising the law of the dead by expanding the interests of the living. Monash University. Law Review, 45 (3), 757-784.

Reconceptualising the law of the dead by expanding the interests of the living

2019

Journal Article

Dismantling Doodeward: guided discretion as the superior basis for property rights in human biological material

Falconer, Kate (2019). Dismantling Doodeward: guided discretion as the superior basis for property rights in human biological material. University of New South Wales Law Journal, 42 (3), 899-927.

Dismantling Doodeward: guided discretion as the superior basis for property rights in human biological material

2019

Journal Article

An illogical distinction continued: Re Cresswell and property rights in human biological material

Falconer, Kate (2019). An illogical distinction continued: Re Cresswell and property rights in human biological material. University of New South Wales Law Journal Forum.

An illogical distinction continued: Re Cresswell and property rights in human biological material