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This book explores central aspects of genetic modification of
animals for scientific purposes in the context technological
possibilities, regulatory issues in different regions, animal
welfare implications and wider ethical issues, exemplified through
current theories and frameworks. This discussion of lab animals
produced through modern biotechnologies becomes increasingly
pressing as CRISPR-Cas9 technology advances rapidly, challenging
legal and ethical frameworks all over the world. Such animals are
now affordable and readily available to almost every branch of
scientific research. This raises enormous potential for creating
‘tailored’ models for human diseases but also rubs up against
the traditional guiding principles (the 3Rs) for the humane use of
animals for scientific experiments and raises wider ethical issues
around death, integrity, and naturalness. In this book, expert
authors from diverse backgrounds in laboratory animal care, animal
research, technology and animal rights explore a range of topics,
from the science behind biotech research animals and the regulation
of their use, to utilitarian, animal rights, virtue ethics, and
ethic of care perspectives on the use of these technologies.
Whatever your background or role in animal research, this book will
challenge and stimulate deeper consideration of the benefits,
disadvantages, and ethical consequences of the use of biotechnology
in the animal laboratory.
This book explores central aspects of genetic modification of
animals for scientific purposes in the context technological
possibilities, regulatory issues in different regions, animal
welfare implications and wider ethical issues, exemplified through
current theories and frameworks. This discussion of lab animals
produced through modern biotechnologies becomes increasingly
pressing as CRISPR-Cas9 technology advances rapidly, challenging
legal and ethical frameworks all over the world. Such animals are
now affordable and readily available to almost every branch of
scientific research. This raises enormous potential for creating
‘tailored’ models for human diseases but also rubs up against
the traditional guiding principles (the 3Rs) for the humane use of
animals for scientific experiments and raises wider ethical issues
around death, integrity, and naturalness. In this book, expert
authors from diverse backgrounds in laboratory animal care, animal
research, technology and animal rights explore a range of topics,
from the science behind biotech research animals and the regulation
of their use, to utilitarian, animal rights, virtue ethics, and
ethic of care perspectives on the use of these technologies.
Whatever your background or role in animal research, this book will
challenge and stimulate deeper consideration of the benefits,
disadvantages, and ethical consequences of the use of biotechnology
in the animal laboratory.
The use of animals in research has always been surrounded by
ethical controversy. This book provides an overview of the central
ethical issues focusing on the interconnectedness of science, law
and ethics. It aims to make theoretical ethical reasoning
understandable to non-ethicists and provide tools to improve
ethical decision making on animal research. It focuses on good
scientific practice, the 3Rs (replacement, reduction and
refinement), ethical theories applied to specific cases and an
overview of regulatory issues. The book is co-authored by experts
in animal research, animal welfare, social sciences, law and
ethics, and provides both animal researchers and members of animal
ethics committees with knowledge that can facilitate their work and
communication with stakeholders and the public. The book is written
to provide knowledge, not to argue a certain position, and is
intended to be used in training that aims to fulfil EU Directive
2010/63/EU.
The use of animals in research has always been surrounded by
ethical controversy. This book provides an overview of the central
ethical issues focusing on the interconnectedness of science, law
and ethics. It aims to make theoretical ethical reasoning
understandable to non-ethicists and provide tools to improve
ethical decision making on animal research. It focuses on good
scientific practice, the 3Rs (replacement, reduction and
refinement), ethical theories applied to specific cases and an
overview of regulatory issues. The book is co-authored by experts
in animal research, animal welfare, social sciences, law and
ethics, and provides both animal researchers and members of animal
ethics committees with knowledge that can facilitate their work and
communication with stakeholders and the public. The book is written
to provide knowledge, not to argue a certain position, and is
intended to be used in training that aims to fulfil EU Directive
2010/63/EU.
The Good, the Right, and the Fair is a comprehensive introduction
to contemporary moral and political philosophy especially suited
for undergraduate students in medicine and the life sciences. The
book covers first questions concerning the good: What makes a life
worth living? Is it only humans who matter morally? Is welfare all
that matters? It then proceeds to a discussion of the right: How
ought we to act? The major ethical theories of the western
tradition are presented and their strengths and weaknesses
discussed. Finally, key aspects of the philosophical discussion of
the fair, including matters of equality, justice, and liberty, are
laid out for the reader. Emphasizing a pluralism of reasonable
views, and with illustrative examples drawn primarily from medicine
and the life sciences, this book is meant to spur interest in, and
to qualify deliberation about ethical issues, rather than to
advance specific conclusions concerning morality and justice.
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