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Title: Dr. Job Title: Innogen Research Fellow Tel: +44 (0) 131 650 2389 Fax: +44 (0) 131 650 6399 Email: gill.haddow@ed.ac.uk Building: ESRC Innogen Centre, The University of Edinburgh, Old Surgeon's Hall, High School Yards, Edinburgh, EH1 1LZ Room Number: G.02
Gill completed her PhD (Organ Transplantation and Donation The Paradox of Gifting and Dis/Embodiment') at the Sociology department at the Univerisity of Edinburgh in 2001. Gill worked as part of a multi-disciplinary team on the evaluation of NHS 24 and completed an ESRC Post-Doctoral Fellowship at the University of Edinburgh before joining Innogen in 2004.
Gill's research interests include the sociology of the body, the 'moral econony', organ transplantation, ethical, legal and social issues around the access and use of data and DNA, the democratic mandate of genetic interest groups and the regulation of cytoplasmic embryos and xenotransplantation.
Gill teaches on the undergraduate Sociology 2 course "Transformations of Self and Society" and co-convenes a postgraduate research training course on 'Data Collection' with Richard Freeman at the University of Edinburgh. She has enjoyed supervising undergraduate and postgraduate students with interests in blood donation, tattooing, pregnant teenagers' views of body image, self-mutiliation, the politics of support groups, the NDNAD etc.
Gill Haddow CV - Aug 2009 (PDF 50.3 kb)
Gill is involved in the following Innogen projects:
Work in progress:
Haddow, G., Bruce, A., Sathandam, S., and Wyatt, J. (In progress) After consent? public views on the anonymisation process and data sharing for research purposes.
Holme, I, and Haddow, G., (in progress) 'Understanding Society'? Using biomarkers and government data in longitudinal surveys, Innogen working paper.
Masson, K., Haddow, G., and Cunningham-Burley (in progress) Translating visions: public consultation and organisational decision-making within Generation Scotland: Scottish Family Health Study,
Journal articles
Haddow, G., Bruce, A., Sathanandam, S., & Wyatt, J.C. (accepted). 'Nothing is really safe': a focus group study on the processes of anonymising and sharing of health data for research purposes. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice
Haddow G., Cunningham-Burley, S., Murray, L., Myant, K., & Carlsson, A. (forthcoming). Can the governance of a population genetic data bank effect recruitment? Evidence from the public consultation of Generation Scotland. Public Understanding of Science.
Haddow, G., Bruce, A., Calvert, J., Harmon, S., & Marsden, W. (2010). 'Not "human" enough to be human but not "animal" enough to be animal - the case of the HFEA, cybrids and xenotransplantation' New Genetics and Society, March, 29 (1) 3 - 17
Haddow G. (2009). "We only did it because he asked us": Family accounts of recruitment to a large-scale population genetic database Social Science & Medicine, 69 (7), 1010-1017
Roberts, A., Heaney, D., Haddow, G., & O'Donnell, C.A. (2009). 'Implementation of a national nurse-led telephone health service in Scotland: assessing the consequences for remote and rural localitites' Rural and Remote Health 9 (1079)
Haddow, G., Cunningham-Burley, S., Parry, S. and Bruce, A. (2008) 'Generation Scotland: consulting publics and specialists at an early stage in a genetic database's development',Critical Public Health, Vol.18, Issue 2, pp.139-149.
Williams, B., Entwistle, V., Haddow G., and Wells, M., (2008) 'Promoting research participation: Why not advertise altruism?' Social Science and Medicine, Vol.66, Issue 7, pp.1451-1456 .
Williams, B., Entwistle, V., Haddow G. and Wells M. (2008) 'Placing evidence in context: A response to Fry's commentary', Social Science and Medicine, Vol.66, Issue 7, pp.1461-1462.
Haddow, G., O'Donnell, K and Heaney, D. (2007) 'Stakeholder Perspectives on New Ways of Delivering Unscheduled Health Care: the role of ownership and organizational identity', Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, Volume 13, Issue 2, pp.179-185.
Haddow, G., Laurie, G., Cunningham-Burley, S., & Hunter, K. (2007) 'Tackling Community Concerns about Commercialisation and Genetic Research: A Modest Interdisciplinary Proposal', Social Science and Medicine, Vol.64, Issue 2, pp. 272-282.
Smith, B., Campbell, H., Blackwood, D., Connell, J., Connor, M., Deary, I., Dominiczak, A.F., Fitzpatrick, B., Ford, I., Jackson, C., Haddow, G., Kerr, S., Lindsay, R., McGilchrist, M., Morton, R., Murray, G., Palmer, C., Pell, J., Ralston, S., St Clair, D., Sullivan, F., Watt, G., Wolf, R., Wright, A., Porteous, D., & Morris, A. (2006) 'Generation Scotland: the Scottish Family Health Study; a new resource for researching genes and heritability', BMC Medical Genetics, Vol.7:74
Haddow, G. (2006) 'Because you’re worth it? The Taking and Selling of Transplantable Organs', Journal of Medical Ethics, Vol.32, pp.324-328.
Haddow, G. (2005) 'The Phenomenology of Death, Embodiment and Organ Transplantation', Sociology of Health and Illness, Vol. 24, Issue 6, pp.92-113.
Haddow, G. (2003) 'Donor and non-donor families’ accounts of communication and relations with healthcare professionals', Progress in Transplantation, Vol.13, Issue 2, pp.1-7.
Books and Book Chapters
Haddow, G., Cunningham-Burley, S., (2008) "Tokens of Trust or Token Trust?: The case of Population Genetic Data Collections" in "Trust, Health and Illness" (eds) Alexandra Greene, Julie Brownlie and Alexandra Howson, Routledge pp.152-173.
Non-peer reviewed articles
Haddow, G., Bruce, A., Calvert, J., Harmon, S., and Marsden W., (2010) 'A Thin Line Between Human and Animal' Britain in 2010, Annual Magazine of the Economic and Social Research Council. p. 92-93
Haddow, G., Bruce, A., Calvert, J., Harmon, S., and Marsden W., (2009) 'Is it a Human?....is it an Animal? No! It's an Admixed Embryo', The Gen: Newsletter for the ESRC Genomics Network. Issue 10, p8
Gorringe, H., Haddow, G., Rafanell, I., Tulle, E., & Yuill, C.(2007). The Transformative Capacity of Embodiment. Edinburgh Working Papers in Sociology, 26, pp. 1-22.
Cunningham-Burley, S, Haddow G, and Parry, S (2006) Walking the walk and talking the talk: Public Engagement, Genomics Network: The Newsletter for the ESRC Genomics Network . Issue Four. (October 2006)
Haddow, G, Cunningham-Burley, S, Bruce, A and Parry, S (2005).Genetic Databases: Friend or Foe? Genomics Network: The Newsletter for the ESRC Genomics Network . Issue Two. June 2005.
Haddow, G, Cunningham-Burley, S, Bruce, A and Parry, S (October 2004). Generation Scotland - Preliminary Consultation Exercise 2003-04, Public and Stakeholder Views from Focus Groups and Interviews (20). InnogenWorking Paper 20.
Invited Presentation
Haddow, G., (10th January 2008) Generation Scotland: Consulting about Public Biobanks, EGAN/Roche Workshop, Basel, Switzerland.
Haddow, G., (16th January 2007): Cadaveric Organ Donation: Family Belongings? Scottish Council on Human Bioethics, Edinburgh
Haddow, G., and Laurie, G., (18th August 2006) "Tackling Community Concerns regarding Commercialisation in Genetic Research: A Modest Interdisciplinary Proposal, ESRC Genomics Forum Workshop on DNA Databases and commercialization, Edinburgh.
Other activities
Editorial Board of journal, Genomics, Society and Policy (2005 - present)
Member of International Working Group on Ethics, Governance and Public Engagement: Public Population Project in Genomics (P3G) consortium
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