Author(s)
Walters, LeRoyKeywords
CellsEmbryonic Stem Cells
Embryos
Organizations
Research
Researchers
Stem Cells
Surveys
Religious Ethics
History of Health Ethics / Bioethics
Social Control of Science and Technology
In Vitro Fertilization and Embryo Transfer
Genetics, Molecular Biology and Microbiology
Social Control of Human Experimentation
International and Political Dimensions of Biology and Medicine
Research on Embryos and Fetuses
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http://hdl.handle.net/10822/504376Abstract
In 1998, researchers discovered that embryonic stem cells could be derived from early human embryos. This discovery has raised a series of ethical and public-policy questions that are now being confronted by multiple international organizations, nations, cultures, and religious traditions. This essay surveys policies for human embryonic stem cell research in four regions of the world, reports on the recent debate at the United Nations about one type of such research, and reviews the positions that various religious traditions have adopted regarding this novel type of research. In several instances the religious traditions seem to have influenced the public-policy debates.Date
2011-07-12Identifier
oai::10822/504376Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 2004 March; 14(1): 3-38
http://hdl.handle.net/10822/504376