Rights and liberties in the biotech age : why we need a genetic bill of rights
著者
書誌事項
Rights and liberties in the biotech age : why we need a genetic bill of rights
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, c2005
- : pbk
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注記
"A project of the Council for Responsible Genetics."
Includes bibliographical references and index
収録内容
- Biodiversity
- Life patents
- Genetically engineered food
- Indigenous peoples
- Environmental genotoxins
- Eugenics
- Genetic privacy
- Genetic discrimination
- Exculpatory DNA evidence
- Prenatal genetic modification
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Rights and Liberties in the Biotech Age is the first book reaching broadly into biotechnology that imbeds the issues into a rights framework for the social management of technology. The contributors to the volume comprise prominent university scientists, civil rights lawyers, and public interest activists who bring their perspectives to issues where science and civil liberties meet head on. This book explores the impact of new genetic technologies on how people define their "personhood" and their basic civil liberties. It questions the thesis of "scientism" where "rights" must adapt and conform to technological changes. Instead, the authors explore the expansion of human rights in the face of new biomedical and bio-agricultural advances so that "rights" and not "technologies" are at the forefront of discussion.
目次
Chapter 1 Foreword Chapter 2 Introduction Part 3 Part I. Biodiversity Chapter 4 The Right to Biodiversity: A Concept Rooted in International Law and Understanding Chapter 4 Genetics, "Natural Rights," and the Preservation of Biodiversity Part 6 Part II. Life Patents Chapter 7 Life Patents and Democratic Values Chapter 7 New Enclosures: Why Civil Society and Governments Should Look Beyond Life Patents Chapter 9 Life Patents Undermine the Exchange of Technology and Scientific Ideas Part 10 Part III. Genetically Engineered Food Chapter 11 Food Free of Genetic Engineering: More Than a Right Chapter 12 A Right to GE-Free Food: The Case of Maize Contamination Chapter 13 Ensuring the Public's Right to Safe Food Part 14 Part IV. Indigenous Peoples Chapter 14 Acts of Self-Determination and Self-Defense: Indigenous Peoples' Responses to Biocolonialism Chapter 16 Global Trade and Intellectual Property: Threats to Indigenous Resources Chapter 17 Indigenous Peoples and Traditional Resource Rights Part 18 Part V. Environmental Genotoxins Chapter 19 Arguing for a Right to Genetic Integrity Chapter 20 Refocusing Genomics Towards the Human Health Effects of Chemically Induced Mutations Chapter 21 "Omics," Toxics, and the Public Interest Part 22 Part VI. Eugenics Chapter 23 Procreative Autonomy Versus Eugenic and Economic Interests of the State Chapter 24 A Disability Rights Approach to Eugenics Part 25 Part VII. Genetic Privacy Chapter 26 Genetic Privacy in the Health Care System Chapter 27 Biotechnology's Challenge to Individual Privacy Part 28 Part VIII. Genetic Discrimination Chapter 29 Beyond Genetic Anti-discrimination Legislation Chapter 30 Analyzing Genetic Discrimination in the Workplace Chapter 31 Disability Rights and Genetic Discrimination Part 32 Part IX. Exculpatory DNA Evidence Chapter 33 A Fundamental Right to Post-conviction DNA Testing Chapter 34 Forensic DNA: The Criminal Defendant's Right to an Independent Expert Part 35 Part X. Prenatal Genetic Modification Chapter 36 The Perils of Human Developmental Modification Chapter 37 Human Rights in a Post-human Future Chapter 38 Rights for Fetuses and Embryos? Chapter 39 Afterword: Focusing Ingenuity with Human Rights Chapter 40 Appendix: The Genetic Bill of Rights
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