Dr Mark Taylor
Position: Senior Lecturer
Email Address: M.J.Taylor@sheffield.ac.uk
Telephone: +44 (0)114 222 6816
Room No: AF20
Academic Profile
I studied law at the University of Hull, graduating with an LLB (Hons) in 1994. Having developed an interest in Jurisprudence as an undergraduate, and having taken some time out to work and travel, I came to Sheffield in 1998 to undertake the MA in Biotechnological Law and Ethics. I remained in Sheffield to complete a PhD on the morality of regulating genetic discrimination. I have been working as a lecturer at the School of Law since 2002. I am actively involved in Research (see below) and Teaching Development and am responsible for the student-tutor programme in the School. I am also the Programme Director for the LLM in Biotechnology, Law and Ethics. Outside of the University, I am a member of the Ethics and Confidentiality Committee of the National Information Governance Board (NIGB ECC).
Deputy Director, Sheffield Institute of Biotechnology, Law and Ethics.
Qualifications
- Ph.D., University of Sheffield, 1999-2003 (awarded Oct, 2003)
- PCHE, University of Sheffield, 2002
- MA in Biotechnological Law and Ethics (with distinction), 1998-99
- LLB (Hons), The University of Hull, 1991-1994
Teaching and Learning
I am involved in a range of teaching at both undergraduate and postgraduate level. I serve as an external examiner at two other universities and I am interested in teaching development. My general approach toward learning and teaching is collaborative: I understand University to be a shared learning experience and I aim for my students to apprentice with me, as I learn with them.
Together with Dr Natasha Taylor, I introduced, designed, and delivered a student-tutor scheme, as well as a Guest Lecture Series, to the School of Law. Both of these were inspired by the idea that there was scope for a greater sharing of experience. This idea does, however, rely upon mutual engagement and I am an advocate of enquiry-based learning.
I was involved in the development and delivery of the HEFCE Centre of Excellence for Teaching and Learning (HEFCE CETL) at the University of Sheffield and I sat on the CILASS (Centre for Inquiry Based Learning in the Arts and Social Sciences) strategic advice committee. Outside of the University I have been involved in outreach and public engagement activity since 2003, including the ESRC Festival of Social Sciences in 2010.
The modules I teach are:
| Undergraduate | Postgraduate and MA |
|---|---|
| Human Rights and Human Genetics (Convenor) | Health Research and Privacy (Convenor) |
| Jurisprudence A: Law and Morality (Convenor) | Principles of Bioethics and Biolaw - Contested Values in the Discovery Chain |
| Understanding Law (Convenor) | The Research Process: Ethics Day School |
| Management Practice for Engineers |
Research Interests
- Regulation of personal information with particular emphasis upon health information and genetic data.
- This specific research interests feeds into a more general interest in the authority of the law and the legitimacy of any demand to subjugate individual preference for the sake of common interest.
- I wish to challenge the rationality of any regulatory regime that presents individual interests as necessarily antithetical to the public interest and I seek to develop a concept of privacy that is capable of reconciling individual (privacy) interest with a broader (public) interest in privacy protection.
Key Publications
Taylor, MJ. Genetic Data and the Law: Critical Perspective on Privacy Protection, (Cambridge: CUP, Feb 2012)
Taylor, MJ. (2011) Health Research, Data Protection, and the Public Interest in Notification. Medical Law Review, 19(2), 267-303.
Taylor, MJ. and Townend, DMR. (2010) Issues in Protecting Privacy in Medical Research Using Genetic Information and Biobanking: The PRIVILEGED Project. Medical Law International, 10(4), 253-268.
Beyleveld D and Taylor MJ. (2008) Patents for Biotechnology and the Data Protection of Biological Samples and Shared Data. In Herveg, J, The Protection of Medical Data: Challenges of the 21st Century (Anthemis: Louvain-la-Neuve), p.127-148.
Taylor (2006) Data Protection, Shared (Genetic) Data and Genetic Discrimination. Medical Law International, 8(1), 51-77
Taylor MJ (2006) Durant in the Court of Appeal: Identifying a Better Approach. European Public Law Journal, 12(3), 461-486
Key Projects/Grants
| Awarding Body: | EU, FP6-2003-Science and Society 9 |
|---|---|
| People Involved: | Principal Investigators: Dr MJ Taylor (Sheffield University ); Assoc. Prof. David Townend (University of Sheffield (at time of award), University of Maastricht during project). Other Investigators: Professor Guilherme De Oliveira; Dr Helena Moniz; Dr Rafael Vale e Reis (University of Coimbra, Portugal); Professor Eugenijus Gefenas; Dr Indra Giraite; Dr Asta Cekanauskaite (University of Vilnius, Lithuania) |
| Title/Description: | Privileged: Privacy in Law, Ethics and Genetic Data |
| Years Funded for: | January 2007 to December 2009 |
| Amount: | €738,270 |
Professional Activities and Recognition
- National Information Governance Board, Ethics and Confidentiality Committee (NIGB ECC) (previously the Patient Information Advisory Group (PIAG)), Vice Chair (Elect) (2011 - ), Member (2007 – ).
- NIGB Research Database Working Group, Chair (March to September 2010).
- External Examiner for University of Glasgow and University of Edinburgh.
- External Evaluator, EUREGIO II (EU FP7) (January to July 2011)
- Member of Editorial Committee, Law, Innovation and Technology (Hart Publishing: General Editors Prof. Roger Brownsword and Prof. Han Somsen) (2009 - )
Areas of Research Supervision
- Data Protection and Information Governance
- Health Information and Genetic Data
- Public Interest and Private Interests in Privacy
- Relationship between Law and Morality
