International Regulation of Biotechnology: Problems and Prospects
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Sam Blay
Abstract
Introduction
Of the issues that confront modern science and the imperatives for development and human progress today, none is more controversial than biotechnology. As one author notes, within ‘a few short decades, the powerful means of biotechnology have revolutionized medicine, agriculture and environmental protection’. The potential implications of biotechnology transcend science and the environment and impact directly on the liberalisation of international trade, the protection of intellectual property rights, the right of self determination of indigenous populations and as custodians and owners of centres of biodiversity, and indeed on international relations generally. Advocates of biotechnology argue that the modification of the genetic make-up of living organisms is nothing new and that biotechnology has been part of human agricultural practices for centuries.
Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Editorial
- Contents
- Author Index
- Subject Index
- Intellectual Property and Biotechnology
- International Regulation of Biotechnology: Problems and Prospects
- Group-Differentiated Rights and Informed Consent for Indigenous Group-Based Genetic Research
- Biotechnological Potential of Marine Sponges and their Associated Bacteria as Producers of New Pharmaceuticals (Part II)
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Editorial
- Contents
- Author Index
- Subject Index
- Intellectual Property and Biotechnology
- International Regulation of Biotechnology: Problems and Prospects
- Group-Differentiated Rights and Informed Consent for Indigenous Group-Based Genetic Research
- Biotechnological Potential of Marine Sponges and their Associated Bacteria as Producers of New Pharmaceuticals (Part II)