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Chimeras Hybrids And Interspecies Research Politics And Policymaking Andrea L Bonnicksen

  • SKU: BELL-1999812
Chimeras Hybrids And Interspecies Research Politics And Policymaking Andrea L Bonnicksen
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Chimeras Hybrids And Interspecies Research Politics And Policymaking Andrea L Bonnicksen instant download after payment.

Publisher: Georgetown University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.68 MB
Pages: 166
Author: Andrea L. Bonnicksen
ISBN: 9781589015746, 1589015746
Language: English
Year: 2009

Product desciption

Chimeras Hybrids And Interspecies Research Politics And Policymaking Andrea L Bonnicksen by Andrea L. Bonnicksen 9781589015746, 1589015746 instant download after payment.

In his 2006 State of the Union speech, President George W. Bush asked the U.S. Congress to prohibit the 'most egregious abuses of medical research', such as the 'creation of animal-human hybrids'. The president's message echoed that of a 2004 report by the President's Council on Bioethics, which recommended that hybrid human-animal embryos be banned by Congress. Discussions of early interspecies research, in which cells or DNA are interchanged between humans and nonhumans at early stages of development, can often devolve into sweeping statements, colorful imagery, and confusing policy. Although today's policy advisory groups are becoming more informed, debate is still limited by the interchangeable use of terms such as chimeras and hybrids, a tendency to treat all forms of interspecies alike, the failure to distinguish between laboratory research and procreation, and not enough serious policy justification. Andrea Bonnicksen seeks to understand reasons behind support of and disdain for interspecies research in such areas as chimerism, hybridization, interspecies nuclear transfer, cross-species embryo transfer, and transgenics. She highlights two claims critics make against early interspecies studies: that the research will violate human dignity and that it can lead to procreation. Are these claims sufficient to justify restrictive policy? Bonnicksen carefully illustrates the challenges of making policy for sensitive and often sensationalized research - research that touches deep-seated values and that probes the boundary between human and nonhuman animals.

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