Book contents
- Law and Legacy in Medical Jurisprudence
- Law and Legacy in Medical Jurisprudence
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 ‘Doing’ Medical Law and Ethics
- 2 A Philosopher Looks at ‘Law and Medical Ethics’
- 3 Thinking Outside the Box
- 4 The Public Interest in Health Research
- 5 Taking the Legacy Forward
- 6 On the Importance of Impact on Policy and Legacy
- 7 Breathing Life into Law
- 8 Biomedical Research Policy
- 9 The Burden of History
- 10 Body Parts and Baleful Stars?
- 11 The Legacy of the Warnock Report
- 12 ‘Only Time Will Tell’
- 13 Integrating the Biological and the Technological
- 14 UK Biobank and the Legal Regulation of Genetic Research
- 15 Overcoming Regulatory Impasse in Stem Cell Research and Advanced Therapy Medicines in Argentina through Shared Norms and Values
- 16 Institutions, Interpretive Communities and Legacy in Decision-Making
- 17 Towards a New Privacy
- 18 A Tale of Two Legacies
- Afterword
- Index
8 - Biomedical Research Policy
Back to the Future?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2021
- Law and Legacy in Medical Jurisprudence
- Law and Legacy in Medical Jurisprudence
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Table of Cases
- Table of Legislation
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 ‘Doing’ Medical Law and Ethics
- 2 A Philosopher Looks at ‘Law and Medical Ethics’
- 3 Thinking Outside the Box
- 4 The Public Interest in Health Research
- 5 Taking the Legacy Forward
- 6 On the Importance of Impact on Policy and Legacy
- 7 Breathing Life into Law
- 8 Biomedical Research Policy
- 9 The Burden of History
- 10 Body Parts and Baleful Stars?
- 11 The Legacy of the Warnock Report
- 12 ‘Only Time Will Tell’
- 13 Integrating the Biological and the Technological
- 14 UK Biobank and the Legal Regulation of Genetic Research
- 15 Overcoming Regulatory Impasse in Stem Cell Research and Advanced Therapy Medicines in Argentina through Shared Norms and Values
- 16 Institutions, Interpretive Communities and Legacy in Decision-Making
- 17 Towards a New Privacy
- 18 A Tale of Two Legacies
- Afterword
- Index
Summary
Graeme Laurie’s notion of reflexive governance, rooted in learning from experiences as issues arise, reminds us that the future is built upon past lessons. This chapter looks to the past better to understand our present and future. It begins with the past, examining the complex interaction of law, ethics and science through the prism of three types of human rights: the rights of children and decisionally vulnerable adults, the right to benefit from scientific advancement, and the rights of future generations. It traces the maturation of each from humble beginnings to playing an increasingly central role in biomedical research policy-making. It then turns to the future, largely uncertain but nevertheless responding to the past and the present. It contends that the future of policy-making is partly in the debates spurred by advances in epigenomics and microbiomics, human heritable genome editing, and the Covid-19 pandemic. Each has put our policy-making legacy to the test, illustrating how new ethical paradigms build upon older ones. It concludes by reflecting on the role that biomedical research policy plays in ensuring that science serves the interests of humanity above all else.
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- Law and Legacy in Medical JurisprudenceEssays in Honour of Graeme Laurie, pp. 167 - 189Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022