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HUMAN DIGNITY IN INTERNATIONAL POLICY DOCUMENTS

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j.1467-8519.2009.01737.x.pdf
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Author(s)
MELO-MARTÍN, INMACULADA DE
Keywords
human dignity
embryo
GE Subjects
Political ethics
Religious ethics
Community ethics
Environmental ethics
Ethics of political systems
Ethics of law
Rights based legal ethics
Peace ethics
Development ethics
Technology ethics
Consumer ethics
Spirituality and ethics
Social ethics
Sexual orientation/gender
Medical ethics
Health ethics
Lifestyle ethics
Family ethics
Resources ethics
Ethics of global commons
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/176237
Abstract
Current developments in biomedicine are presenting us with difficult ethical decisions and raising complex policy questions about how to regulate these new developments. Particularly vexing for governments have been issues related to human embryo experimentation. Because some of the most promising biomedical developments, such as stem cell research and nuclear somatic transfer, involve such experimentation, several international bodies have drafted documents aimed to provide guidance to governments when developing biomedical science policy. Here I focus on two such documents: the Council of Europe’s Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Dignity of the Human Being and the Additional Protocol to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Dignity of the Human Being. I argue that by using human dignity as a criterion to determine the permissibility of particular human embryo research practices, these documents cannot aid in identifying research that would be contrary to human dignity. Thus, they fail to guide public policy on embryo experimentation. Their use of human dignity as a criterion makes their task of offering guidance unfeasible because the concept as used in these documents is too vague and is applied in contradictory ways. I discuss the main goals of these documents and their claims in relation to human embryo research. I then discuss how they have influenced public policy in several countries. Finally, I show that although these Council of Europe treaties attempt to serve as public policy guides in the area of embryo research, they fail to do so.
Date
2011
Type
Book chapter
Copyright/License
With permission of the license/copyright holder
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