List of Contributors.
Acknowledgements.
Introduction : Justine Burley (University of Manchester and Exeter College, Oxford) and John Harris (University of Manchester).
1. Stem cells: C.N. Svendsen (University of Cambridge).
2. Gene therapy for neurological disorders: P.R. Lowenstein (Gene Therapeutics Institute).
3. Cloning in biology and medicine: Ian Wilmut (Roslin Institute)Genetics of old age: Thomas B.L. Kirkwood (University of Newcastle).
4. The ethical legacy of Nazi medical war crimes: Paul Weindling (Oxford Bookes University).
5. Biotechnology and animals: Bernard E. Rollin (Colorado State University).
6. The role of informed consent in genetic experimentation: SørenHolm (University of Oslo).
7. Testing children and adolescents: Dorothy Wertz (University of Massachusetts).
8. Genetic testing of children: Lainie Friedman Ross (University of Chicago).
9. Mapping the human genome and "Monster Mythology": George J. Annas (Boston University).
10. The moral status of the gene: Mary Anne Warren (San Francisco State University).
11. The ethical use of human embryonic stem cells in research and therapy: John Harris (University of Manchester).
12. Preimplantation genetic diagnosis and embryo selection: Bonnie Steinbock (State University of New York at Albany).
13. Individual autonomy and genetic choice: Matthew Clayton (Brunel University).
14. Cloning and public policy: Ruth Macklin (Albert Einstein College of Medicine).
15. Sex-selection: The feminist response: Diemut Bubeck (London School of Economics).
16. Creating perfect people: Philip Kitcher (Columbia University).
17. Genetics and personal identity: Carol Rovane (Columbia University).
18. Genetic determinism and gene selection: Richard Dawkins (University of Oxford and New College).
19. The "Darwin Wars" and the human self image: Janet Radcliffe Richards (University College London.
20. Religion and Gene Therapy: Gerald McKenny (Rice University).
21. ‘Race', genetics and human difference: Hussein Kassim (University of London).
22. Self-ownership, begetting and germ-line information: Hillel Steiner (University of Manchester).
23. Justice, genetics and lifestyles: Inez de Beaufort (Erasmus University).
24. Commercial exploitation of the human genome: Ruth Chadwick (Lancaster University) and Adam Hedgecoe (University College London).
25. Forensic DNA typing: David Wasserman (University of Maryland).
26. Privacy and genetics: Madison Powers (Georgetown University).
27. DNA banking: Bartha Maria Knoppers (University of Montreal).
28. Genetic difference in the workplace: Michael Yesley (Los Alamos National Laboratory).
29. The insurance market and discriminatory practices: Tom Sorell (University of Ethics).
30. Legal and ethical issues in biotechnology patenting: Pilar Ossorio (American Medical Association.
31. Patented genes: Mark Sagoff (University of Maryland, College Park).
32. Property, patents, and genetic material: Stephen Munzer (University of California, Los Angeles).
33. Genetic screening from a public health perspective: Scott Burris (Temple University) and Lawrence Gostin (Georgetown University).
Afterword: Sir David Weatherall (University of Oxford).
Index
Justine Burley is Adjunct Associate Professor at the
National University of Singapore. Most recently, she was a Lecturer
at the University of Oxford. She served as Fellow of the Institute
of Medicine, Law and Bioethics (1995-1998) at Oxford and as Simon
Fellow at the University of Manchester (1998-2002). She is editor
of The Genetic Revolution and Human Rights (1999) and Dworkin and
His Critics (Blackwell, 2004).
John Harris is Sir David Alliance Professor of Bioethics at the University of Manchester where he is also Director of the Centre for Social Ethics and Policy and Academic Director of the Institute of Medicine, Law and Bioethics. He is the author of Violence and Responsibility (1980), The Value of Life (1985), Wonderwoman and Superman (1992), and Clones, Genes and Immortality (1998). He has also co-edited Experiments on Embryos (1990), Ethics and Biotechnology (1994), and The Future of Human Reproduction (1998).
“The editors are to be congratulated on compiling such a
stimulating and provocative volume. This is for those who wish to
examine the basis of human bioethics thoroughly, whether they be
novice or expert. Those who think they have clear attitudes to many
of the ethical and social issues raised by developments in human
genetics are likely to be forced to rethink at least some of their
positions by the challenging and well-presented arguments that have
been gathered together here."
Angus Clarke, University of Wales
"This timely book makes clear that genetic research will transform
healthcare, choices about children, and standards of property. The
contributors here stake out key questions facing health
professionals and social policy makers, and they have insightful
things to say about how we should go about answering those
questions."
Timothy F. Murphy, University of IllinoisCollege of Medicine at
Chicago
" ... Genethics makes some important contributions, offering a
primer on key aspects of contemporary genetics before focusing on
some of the most important ethical, legal, economic, political
issues facing researchers, politicians, and, to some extent, the
general population ... The book's strengths are its
multidisciplinary approach, the overall quality of its
contributions, and the refusal of most contributors to oversimplify
and risk the microdeterminism of many popular essays." Choice
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