Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 224
Trim: 7 x 9¼
978-0-7425-3266-3 • Hardback • August 2004 • $144.00 • (£111.00)
978-0-7425-3267-0 • Paperback • August 2004 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Michael C. Brannigan is vice president of clinical and organizational ethics at the Center for Practical Bioethics in Kansas City, Missouri.
Part 1 Introduction: The Need for Cross-Cultural Considerations in Biotechnology
Part 2 International Overviews and Policies
Chapter 3 Commercialization and Benefit-Sharing of Biotechnology: Cross-Cultural Concerns?
Chapter 4 The International Human Genome Project: An Overview
Chapter 5 Ethical and Legal Aspects of Biotechnology
Part 6 Specific Challenges in Cultures and Nations
Chapter 7 The Ethics and Policy Issues in Creating a Stem Cell Donor: A Case Study in Reproductive Genetics
Chapter 8 Optimizing Safety and Benefits of Genetic Testing: A Look at the Canadian Policy
Chapter 9 Experimentation on Human Embryos: The Bioethical Discussion in Europe with Special Attention to Austria and Germany
Chapter 10 The Cultural Challenge of Biotechnology in Post-Communist Europe
Chapter 11 Why Is This Gene Different from All Other Genes? The Jewish Approach to Biotechnology
Chapter 12 Islamic Perspectives on Biotechnology
Chapter 13 Agricultural Biotechnology in African Countries
Chapter 14 Autonomy, Humane Medicine, and Research Ethics: An East Asian Perspective
Chapter 15 Indigenous Knowledge, Patenting, and the Biotechnology Industry
Part 16 Specific Global Challenges
Chapter 17 Cross-Cultural Issues in Balancing Patent Rights and Consumer Access to Biotechnological and Pharmaceutical Inventions
Chapter 18 Media, Biotechnology, and Culture
Chapter 19 Tricksters, The Plague, and Mirrors: Biotechnology, Bioterrorism, and Justice
This is a fascinating collection of essays for two reasons. It covers an extraordinarily broad range of issues at the forefront of contemporary bioethical debates. It also articulates among cultural diversities what are shared values in applications of biotechnology across cultural, political, and religious boundaries.
— Henk ten Have, Division of Ethics of Science and Technology, UNESCO