There is currently no international consensus on how human germline engineering should be regulated. Existing national legislation fails to provide the governance framework necessary to regulate germline engineering in the CRISPR era. This is an obstacle to scientific and clinical advancements and inconsistent with human rights requirements. To move forward, we suggest that the human right to science is an ideal starting point for building consensus, at the national and international levels, on governing principles that promote responsible scientific and technological advancements. Regulatory frameworks must recognize the international nature of modern germline genome engineering research, the need for shared governance rather than tech-loc...
I want to enrich the debate about the ethics and governance of human germline editing (HGE) by empha...
Technological developments in gene editing raise high expectations for clinical applications, includ...
From the birth of bioethics in the United States to the hindrance of advancement caused by laws that...
There is currently no international consensus on how human germline engineering should be regulated....
The advent of the CRISPR/Cas9 class of genome editing tools is transforming not just science and med...
In most legal orders, human germline modification is either prohibited or severely restricted. A rec...
As with any rapid technological developments, the biotechnology revolution is putting great strains ...
As with any rapid technological developments, the biotechnology revolution is putting great strains ...
Emergence of novel genome engineering technologies such as clustered regularly interspaced short pal...
Revolutionary technology, particularly in biology and genetics raised profound new ethical and human...
AbstractThis article offers a critical assessment of the role of international human rights law in t...
This book follows and complements the previous volume 'Biotechnology and international law' (Hart, 2...
Thanks to rapid advances in genetic technology, scientists can give cells cancer-fighting capabiliti...
This Note will argue that human germline editing ought to be subject to a worldwide regulatory initi...
In the wake of the heritable human genome editing (HHGE) experiments carried out by He Jiankui in Ch...
I want to enrich the debate about the ethics and governance of human germline editing (HGE) by empha...
Technological developments in gene editing raise high expectations for clinical applications, includ...
From the birth of bioethics in the United States to the hindrance of advancement caused by laws that...
There is currently no international consensus on how human germline engineering should be regulated....
The advent of the CRISPR/Cas9 class of genome editing tools is transforming not just science and med...
In most legal orders, human germline modification is either prohibited or severely restricted. A rec...
As with any rapid technological developments, the biotechnology revolution is putting great strains ...
As with any rapid technological developments, the biotechnology revolution is putting great strains ...
Emergence of novel genome engineering technologies such as clustered regularly interspaced short pal...
Revolutionary technology, particularly in biology and genetics raised profound new ethical and human...
AbstractThis article offers a critical assessment of the role of international human rights law in t...
This book follows and complements the previous volume 'Biotechnology and international law' (Hart, 2...
Thanks to rapid advances in genetic technology, scientists can give cells cancer-fighting capabiliti...
This Note will argue that human germline editing ought to be subject to a worldwide regulatory initi...
In the wake of the heritable human genome editing (HHGE) experiments carried out by He Jiankui in Ch...
I want to enrich the debate about the ethics and governance of human germline editing (HGE) by empha...
Technological developments in gene editing raise high expectations for clinical applications, includ...
From the birth of bioethics in the United States to the hindrance of advancement caused by laws that...