People
Dr Nataly Papadopoulou
Lecturer (Assistant Professor)

School/Department: Leicester Law School
Telephone: +44 (0)116 252 2288
Profile
I hold a Bachelor of Laws - LLB Law (2012) and a Doctor of Philosophy – PhD (2018) from Leicester Law School, Â鶹ÊÓƵ, and a Master of Laws - LLM in Human Rights Law from the School of Law, Queen Mary, University of London (2013).
I am an academic with specialist knowledge in medical/health law and human rights. I research the law and practice at the end-of-life, especially the regulation and practice of assisted death from a comparative, contextual perspective. I consider assisted death as a global phenomenon, and a pressing contemporary challenge which demands legal and healthcare input, comparative, cross-disciplinary perspectives, creativity and innovation. I take a comparative approach to my research to understand not just regulation and its practice, but also the culture and politics shaping end-of-life practices.
I am also an experienced Higher Education teacher, who has taught students of a wide range of skills and abilities, of different backgrounds and nationalities at UG and PG level. I am a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy since 2019, and I hold a PG Certificate in Higher Education (PGCHE).
Research
My research is organised around three main pillars:
- The means (legislation, expert committees, citizens’ juries, public referenda, judicial decisions, etc.) and the reasons for reform achieved in some jurisdictions and not in other, and what this means for the future of assisted death culturally, socially, politically.
- Following regulation, the form law and its practice takes and how balance is achieved between competing rights, but also the interests of key actors.
- The best way of ensuring conversations on death and dying as a society, including about all end-of-life options: advance directives, palliative care (including hospice care), funeral planning, will-writings, and so on.
I have been co-ordinating the following two research groups, one in the UK (Leicester), one in Europe.
Our *NEW* End-of-Life European Research Network
established and led by Prof Sandra Hotz (University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland) & Dr Nataly Papadopoulou (Â鶹ÊÓƵ, UK).
First meeting: KU Leuven, Belgium (June 2022) & Second meeting: Brocher, Geneva, Switzerland (January 2025).
Key members: Prof Sandra Hotz (University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland), Prof Michael Kubiciel (Augsburg University, Germany); Dr Jesus Maria Fernandez Diaz (Founder & CEO, Hiris, Madrid); Prof Kristof Van Assche (Antwerp University, Belgium); Prof Steven Lierman (KU Leuven, Belgium); and Prof Christian Crocetta (Salesian University Institute of Venice – IUSVE).
Our Deliberate Dying Research Group at the Â鶹ÊÓƵ
An interdisciplinary Working Group made of: emergency physicians, clinical psychologists, archaeologists and historians, legal academics to explore first, culture around and management of suicide from a cross-cultural perspective, second, how law and clinical practice come together, third, perceptions, narratives, and the vocabulary used to talk about suicide, death, and dying.
Publications
Books
Liz Wicks and Nataly Papadopoulou, Research Handbook on Human Rights Law and Health Research Handbooks in Human Rights series, Elgar Publishing (due for publication in September 2025).
Journal Articles & Book Chapters
Liz Wicks and Nataly Papadopoulou, 'Human Rights Law and Health – New Challenges; New Perspectives' in Liz Wicks and Nataly Papadopoulou, Research Handbooks in Human Rights series, Elgar Publishing (forthcoming September 2025).
Nataly Papadopoulou and Cedric Gilson, ‘Political environments of assisted dying: affirming the legitimacy of assisted dying legislation’ in Liz Wicks and Nataly Papadopoulou, Research Handbooks in Human Rights series, Elgar Publishing (forthcoming September 2025).
Nataly Papadopoulou and Liz Wicks, 'The Contribution Of The European Court Of Human Rights To End-Of-Life Law And Practice: Looking Back To Look Forward' (forthcoming in the European Yearbook of Human Rights).
Nataly Papadopoulou, 'The Health and Social Care Committee Report on assisted suicide/assisted dying: another opportunity for the legislature (and even the judiciary) to deliberate on end-of-life in England and Wales' (forthcoming in the Medical Law International).
James David van Oppen, Sarah Gunn, Timothy John Coats, Nataly Papadopoulou, Michaela Senkova, Sarah Tarlow, Elizabeth Wicks, 'Planning for end of life in the past and present: historical, legal and clinical perspectives on ReSPECT' (2025) Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, pp. 1-8.
Chrystala Fakonti and Nataly Papadopoulou, ‘Choice, autonomy, coercion in Scotland’s 2024 Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults Bill: A criminal and medical law comment’ (2025) 29 Edinburgh Law Review 1, pp. 162-168.
Nataly Papadopoulou and Liz Wicks, 'Taking ‘the right to life’ seriously: addressing the role of ‘the right to life’ in the context of assisted dying' (2024) Medical Law International, pp. 1-22.
Nataly Papadopoulou, ‘Dying with Assistance: The Role of Evidence, The Power of a Declaration, and the Call for an Inquiry’ (2021) 30 Medical Law Review 1, pp. 81-109.
Nataly Papadopoulou and Clark Hobson, ‘Should courts hear oral evidence when determining the proportionality of section 2 (1) of the Suicide Act 1961?’ (2021) Medical Law Review, pp. 348–363.
Clark Hobson and Nataly Papadopoulou, ‘Regulating Risk and Autonomy in Assisted Suicide: Conway v Secretary of State for Justice’ (2020) 29 Medical Law Review 1, pp. 128–142.
Nataly Papadopoulou, ‘Losing our Grip on Death: What now for Assisted Dying in the UK?’ (2017) 5 Journal of Medical Law and Ethics 1, pp. 57-79.
Nataly Papadopoulou, 'From Pretty to Nicklinson: Changing Judicial Attitudes to Assisted Dying' (2017) 3 European Human Rights Law Review, pp. 298-307 (cited by the European Parliament and EPRS for selected readings on: 'Assisted Dying in the EU and Beyond').
Reports
Nataly Papadopoulou, Clark Hobson, Liz Wicks, Written expert submission for Health, Social Care and Sport Committee re the Assisted Dying for Terminally Ill Adults (Scotland) Bill (August 2024 - available on request).
Nataly Papadopoulou, Clark Hobson, Liz Wicks, Written expert submission to the Health and Social Care Select Committee - inquiry into assisted dying/assisted suicide 2022-2023 (available here: ).
Nataly Papadopoulou, Clark Hobson, Liz Wicks, Written expert submission to the Scottish Parliament re ‘a proposal for a Bill to enable competent adults who are terminally ill to be provided at their request with assistance to end their life’ (December 2021 - available on request).
Nataly Papadopoulou, Written submission for the Law Commission’s 14th Programme of law reform (July 2021 - available on request).
Dzehtsiarou, Falcetta, Giannoulopoulos, Johnson, Expert Submission to the Independent Human Rights Act Review (contributor, March 2021 – available on request).
Nataly Papadopoulou, Written submission to the Committee on Justice on the An Bille um Bás Dínitiúil, 2020/ Dying with Dignity Bill 2020 (January 2021 - available on request).
Book reviews/other:
Maribel Canto-Lopez, Arwen Joyce, and Nataly Papadopoulou, ‘Legal Skills for Citizens of Change Conference at Â鶹ÊÓƵ explores legal skills from multiple perspectives' (2023) Association of Law Teachers Blog, available at http://lawteacher.ac.uk/alt-blog-2/.
Sue Westwood, Death Rights: Regulating the End of Life Medical Law Review (2023) 1-7 10.1093/medlaw/fwad011 – book review.
Ben P. White and Lindy Wilmott, International Perspectives on End-of-Life Law Reform: Politics, Persuasion and Persistence Bioethics (2022) https://doi.org/10.1111/bioe.13090 – book review.
David Albert Jones, Chris Gastmans, and Calum Mackellar, Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide: Lessons from Belgium 27 Medical Law Review 1 (2019) 180-187 -book review.
Nataly Papadopoulou, ‘Re: Canada’s new assisted dying law faces legal challenge’ BMJ 2016; 354 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.i3688 (Published 01 July 2016) (Response, 31 January 2017) (British Medical Journal (BMJ) response).
Supervision
I am happy to supervise UG, LLM, and PhD students in matters relating to: Medical Law, Human Rights, End of life, Assisted suicide, Euthanasia, Death and dying.
I have supervised a number of LLB and LLM dissertations over the years on various topics around medical law, human rights, criminal law.
I currently supervise the following PGR students:
1. Lydia Kitchen FT centenary scholarship (2022-2026) on the topic of 'Human Rights Law and the Provision of Health Care: Rationing Decisions During a Pandemic' (with Prof Liz Wicks and Dr Louise Austin).
2. Kyla Lanford FT (2023-2027) on the topic of 'Mandatory Vaccination Reconsidered in light of the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Reflection on the Human Rights Infringements in the Healthcare Sector in the UK' (with Dr Stephen Riley).
3. Alissa Pham PT (2018-2024) on the topic of 'Building legal culture competency in Public Legal Education: A case study on activities for Law School students in aiding the public' (with Laura Bee, and Dr Ed Bates) - DEFENDED SUCCESSFULLY.
4. Afolabi Mutiat (2024-2028) Wellcome Trust Doctoral Training Programme Scholarship on the topic of ‘the legal, ethical and social implications of whole genome sequencing at birth’ (with Dr Tracey Elliott and Prof Jose Miola).
Teaching
Undergraduate:
LW3220 Criminal Law
LW3260 Medical Law
LW1150 Law of Tort
Postgraduate - (new!) LLM Health Law:
Health Law II (Beginnings and Endings of Life)
Inequalities and Health
Human Rights and Health Care Law
Activities
Member (academic organisations, research centres, charity and campaign organisations):
The Association of Law Teachers; Socio-Legal Studies Association.
Centre for European Law and Internationalisation (CELI); Centre for Rights and Equality in Health Law (CREHL).
Dignity in Dying; My Death My Decision; Liberty; Dignitas.
University key activities and responsibilities:
Pro Bono: Street Law academic coordinator;
Leicester University and College Union (UCU) branch co-secretary.
External activities and responsibilities:
Peer-reviewing for:
Medical Law Review, Medical Law International, European Yearbook on Human Rights, Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly, The LJMU Student Law Journal, Legal Issues Journal (also on the editorial board).
External academic research visits:
KU Leuven, Faculteit Rechtsgeleerdheid en Criminologische Wetenschappen - Positions held: Global Professor & Research Fellow (sponsor: Prof. dr. Steven Lierman) - 2024.
Deustuko Unibertsitatea/Universidad de Deusto (sponsor: Profa. Dra. Elena Atienza Macías) - 2024.
Universidad de Zaragoza, Facultad de Derecho, Derecho Constitucional (sponsor: Prof. Gonzalo Arruego Rodríguez) - 2024.
Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, Departamento de Derecho Común (sponsor: Prof. Maria Paz Garcia Rubio, and others) - 2024.
Universidad de Granada - Facultad de Derecho (sponsors: Prof. Fernando Esteban de la Rosa) - 2024.
Universidad de Granada - Facultad de Trabajo social (sponsor: José Manuel Jiménez Rodríguez) - 2025.
Awards
Brocher Foundation 2023-2025:
Lead applicants: Prof Sandra Hotz (University of Neuchâtel, Switzerland) & Dr Nataly Papadopoulou (Â鶹ÊÓƵ, UK).
£7,000 aprx to hold a two-day workshop followed by a publication in Brocher, Switzerland to bring together experts from across Europe to discuss recent developments and directions in law, policy and practice on assisted dying.
LeicSurvey (large-scale digital survey tool, start-up):
- £62,500 ARC Accelerate - ESRC/AHRC SHAPE Catalyst for ‘LeicSurvey: A digital survey tool for the heritage sector’ (Co-I, with Himanshu Kaul (PI), and Sarah Scott).
- £35,000 MRC Impact Acceleration Account (IAA) for ‘Creating and promoting LeicSurvey: A digital survey tool for hospice care’ (Co-I, with Himanshu Kaul (PI), Mukund Janardhanan and others).
- £12,000 Centenary Community Engagement Fund Project (Leicester Institute of Advance Studies) to initiate and create LeicSurvey for LOROS hospice (Co-I, with Himanshu Kaul (PI), Mukund Janardhanan and others).
Early Career Researcher (ECR) activities:
- £5,000 aprx by the UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) Enhancing Research Culture Fund for academic activities relevant to CSSAH ECR Action Group 2022-2023.
- £2,000 aprx (lead organiser) by the British Academy ECR Network (BA ECRN) to host Multidisciplinary Meet-up: Crises at College Court, Â鶹ÊÓƵ 2023.
- £8,000 by the BA ECRN to host Writing Retreat: September 2024 at Birmingham via the Writing Exchange and Support ThinkIn Group (lead organiser).
- £8,000 by the BA ECRN to host Writing Retreat: February 2023 at Leicester via the Writing Exchange and Support ThinkIn Group (lead organiser).
- £2,000 aprx by CSSAH, Â鶹ÊÓƵ for ECR activities 2021-2022.
Other funding:
Research Handbook on Human Rights Law and Health (Elgar):
- £1,000 aprx from Centre for Rights and Equality in Health Law (CREHL) to host first workshop of the research team.
- £3,000 aprx from ESRC Impact Development Fund (Â鶹ÊÓƵ) to host second workshop of the research team + £100 from Elgar Publishing.
ESRC Festival of Social Science
£1,500 aprx to design and organise public engagement event on ‘Well-being at the end’. Immersive exhibition on four key controversies around assisted dying, stakeholder panel discussions, mock Law Commission presentations, and a mock parliamentary session on voting on a new Assisted Dying Bill attended by 35 students aged between 18-21.
Travel grant
£2,500 aprx by the University of Huddersfield, research travel grant to attend 25th Annual World Congress of Medical Law in Tokyo, Japan August 2019.
Conferences
Selected conferences:
‘A call for an interdisciplinary, holistic approach to the end-of-life: clinical and human rights challenges with the terminal illness eligibility criterion for aid-in-dying (MAID)’ Granada Conference on End-of-Life 2025 (May 2025 - Granada, Spain).
'Navigating the Future of Assisted Dying in the UK' (with Professor Nancy Preston, Professor of Supportive and Palliative Care and Co-Director of the International Observatory on End of Life Care in the Faculty of Health and Medicine at Lancaster University) The Palliative Care Research Society (invited speaker - April 2025 - virtual seminar).
'Interdisciplinarity and latest developments on assisted dying in the UK' + 'Assisted Dying in the UK: Attitudes of Clinical Psychologists and Medical Doctors’’ (with Dr Emma Acford, Clinical Psychologist) Joint seminar with School of Psychology, Â鶹ÊÓƵ hosted by the Centre for Rights and Equality in Health Law (February 2025 - Leicester, UK).
‘An inclusive and frictionless survey tool to enhance service user feedback rate’ (with Arunachalam, Mattireddy, Mambully Sony, Polkey, Mickleburgh, Janardhanan, Faull, Kaul), The Hospice UK National Conference 2024 (poster presentation - November 2024 - Glasgow, Scotland).
‘Looking back to look forward: assisted death in the UK, current developments and future directions’ Public Lecture, Universidad de Zaragoza (invited speaker - November 2024 - Zaragoza, Spain).
'Reconciling the right to life with the right to die in the assisted dying discourse' Seminario INEDyTO de Bioética (SiB), Universidad de Granada (invited speaker - October 2024 - Granada, Spain).
‘Article 2 and dying: The different uses of the Right to Life in the context of dying with assistance’ Biennial International Conference of The World Federation of Right to Die Societies ('WFRTDS') (presenter - September 2024 - Dublin, Ireland).
‘Creating LeicSurvey: a survey tool for hospices’ 13th World Research Congress of the European Association for Palliative Care (presenter - May 2024 - Barcelona, Spain).
Legal Skills for Citizens of Change, 'Legal Technology for Students and Academics' (with K Georgiadis) (invited speaker/co-organiser - December 2022).
The Human Rights Act After 22 Years: Evolution, Impact, Future Directions, '22 years on – the HRA and its impact (and non-impact) on assisted dying' (invited speaker - November 2022 - London, UK).
Expert seminar on 'cross-border access to end-of-life service in Europe' (invited speaker - June 2022 - Leuven, Belgium).
The IV. International Medical Law Congress - Istanbul Medeniyet University Medical Law Research Center and Ankara Medipol University (invited member of the academic committee - November 2021 - virtual).
14th Programme of Law Reform - Law Commission: “speed” law reform presentation on ‘decriminalising assisted suicide’ - virtual).
‘Dying with Assistance: The Role of Evidence The Power of a Declaration the Call for an Inquiry’ SLSA Annual Conference - University of Cardiff (presenter - March 2021 - virtual).
‘Panel discussion on Assisted Dying reform’ Big Voice London Model Law Commission, University of Law (invited speaker - October 2019 - London).
‘Article 2 ECHR: A breach of the rights of those wanting to die?’ World Association for Medical Law (WAML) 2019 Congress - Waseda University (presenter - August 2019 - Tokyo, Japan).
‘On Article 2 and Dying with Assistance’ SLSA Annual Conference - University of Leeds (presenter - April 2019 - Leeds, UK).
‘Re-defining 'assisted dying' in England and Wales: A new proposal for legalisation’ SLS Annual Conference - Queen Mary University of London (presenter - September 2018 - London, UK).
‘How may Assisted Suicide be Legalised in England and Wales?’ Annual Leicester - Modena Conference - De Montford University Leicester (presenter - May 2018 - Leicester).
Human Rights Annual Conference, Lawyers without Boarders Student Division - King's College, Aberdeen University (invited speaker - April 2018 - Aberdeen).
‘The Last Human Right: A Critical Analysis of the Eligibility Criteria of the Commission on Assisted Dying’ A Right to Die? Socio-Legal Perspectives - Keele University (poster presentation - July 2017 - Keele).
‘Should you be suffering unbearably or be terminally ill to be allowed to die?’ SLSA Annual Conference 2017 - Newcastle University (presenter - April 2017 - Newcastle).
‘Terminal Illness as a Determinant for Assisted Dying Eligibility’ Edinburgh Postgraduate Conference: Law and its Boundaries - University of Edinburgh (presenter - January 2017 - Edinburgh).
'A Terminal Illness Criterion for Requesting Assistance in Dying?' Leicester-Modena Conference: A Dialogue on Law and Rights - Â鶹ÊÓƵ (presenter - April 2016 - Leicester).
‘Rethinking Death: The Assisted Dying Bill 2014-15’ Midlands Postgraduate Conference in Law: Law, Rhetoric and Reality - Â鶹ÊÓƵ (presenter - May 2015 - Leicester).
‘A Critical Approach for the UK Assisted Suicide Law’ Leicester-Modena Conference - Università degli Studi di Modena e Reggio Emilia, Modena, Italia (presenter - April 2015 - Italy).
‘Rethinking Death: Assisted Dying Bill 2014-15 the way forward?’ SLSA Annual Conference - University of Warwick (presenter - April 2015 - Warwick).
Media coverage
Νάταλη ΠαπαδοποÏλου, 'ÎŒχι δεν υπάρχουν γκρίζα σημεία στην νομοθεσία για την ευθανασία' (Αλήθεια, ΚÏπρος 2022) – Nataly Papadopoulou, ‘There is no space for uncertainties with regards to the laws on euthanasia’ (Alitheia Newspaper, Cyprus 2022).
Nataly Papadopoulou, 'How the Human Rights Act has helped the law on assisted suicide in England and Wales develop, and why we still need it' (Human Rights in Action project, April 2021)
Nataly Papadopoulou, 'The current call for a (fresh) inquiry on assisted suicide' (Journal of Medical Ethics blog, November 2020)
Nataly Papadopoulou, 'Assisted dying laws are progressing in some places - the UK isn't one of them' (The Independence and The Conversation, 2017)
Nataly Papadopoulou, ‘So, What About Assisted Dying?’ Socio-Legal Studies Association (SLSA) Blog (December 2016).