Special Event
TOWARD A CONSENSUS ON CLONING?
U.S. Policy and the Global Debate
News that Canada has banned all human cloning has drawn fresh
attention to the fact that here in the United States legislative
efforts remain stalled. In fact, around the world many nations
have passed
laws to regulate this new technology. A broad consensus is slowly
emerging in places as diverse as Australia, Germany, Canada,
Norway, and France. These nations disagree on many related questions – such
as stem-cell research on “spare” embryos from in vitro programs.
But they have each acted to prohibit the use of cloning to make
human embryos – for basic research, “therapeutic cloning,” or
to produce live-born children.
There has been a parallel debate at the United Nations, where
the General Assembly has been considering proposals for either
a ban on “reproductive” cloning (that is, cloning to produce
children) or a ban on any use of somatic cell nuclear transfer – the
technology that cloned Dolly the sheep back in 1996 – in human
beings (that would therefore also prohibit cloning for research
purposes). In the Fall of 2003, there were more than 60 states
co-sponsoring a Costa Rican proposal for a comprehensive ban,
and over 20 co-sponsors for a Belgian proposal focused on “reproductive” cloning
only. Both Germany and France, who had offered the original “reproductive” cloning
proposal, have indicated that while they may disagree on tactics
at the UN, they are in principle in favor of a comprehensive
global cloning ban.
The Institute on Biotechnology and the Human Future (IBHF)
has arranged two expert events to update the policy community
on these developments on Friday, July 9 in Washington, D.C.
Participants include progressives and conservatives.
Staff briefing (lunch provided) on Capitol Hill (in the Capitol,
room HC-6), noon
Symposium (light refreshments) at the National Press Club (Holeman
Lounge), 4.30 p.m.
Participants to include:
Lori B. Andrews, Distinguished Professor of
Law, Chicago-Kent College of Law; Board Chair, Institute on Biotechnology
and the
Human Future
Nigel M. de S. Cameron, President, Institute on Biotechnology
and the Human Future
Rosario Isasi, University of Montreal, Canada
Henk Jochemsen, Director, Lindeboom Institute, Ede, Netherlands;
Chair in Medical Ethics, Free University of Amsterdam
Abby Lippman, Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics
at McGill University, Canada
David Prentice, Professor of Life Sciences, Indiana State University
Please RSVP to rsvp@thehumanfuture.org.
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