Ethical and Legal Requirements of Transnational Genetic Research
By (Author) Regine Kollek
By (author) Marian Arning
By (author) Tina Kruegel
By (author) Imme Petersen
By (author) Prof. Dr Nikolaus Forg
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Beck/Hart Publishing
16th November 2010
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
344.04196
Hardback
190
Width 171mm, Height 234mm, Spine 15mm
With the advancement of molecular technologies, genetic research has made enormous progress over the last decade. To facilitate genetic research, the collection, integration and exploitation of data are prerequisite. Genetic data, however, providing information not only about the person herself but also about her family, parentage and ethnic decent, are regarded as both the most valuable and vulnerable data, worthy of protection by all and any means. On the other hand, clinical research makes it necessary to disclose and exchange genetic data. In order to resolve this dilemma ethical and legal requirements must be observed. To this end, this book provides for an in-depth overview of the respective requirements. In its legal part focus is laid on the European Data Protection Directive 95/46/EC and its impact on Trans-European Research Projects and other genetic research networks.
.. a very helpful and thorough review of the ethical literature ...there is no doubt that the authors have addresses a set of questions that are pressing for the facilitation of transnational genetic research; their reflections on both the ethical and the legal issues take us deep into the difficulties of getting the regulatory environment right ...this is a particularly timely and valuable contribution to the literature. -- Roger Brownsword * Law, Innovation and Technology *
The book is remarkable in that it presents a complete technical and legal framework to enable researchers to build a European research infrastructure that promises further scientific advancement in the therapy or prevention of diseases. Readers will enjoy a detailed analysis of informed consent from an ethical and legal perspective, and furthermore an excellent compendium of legal analysis concerning genetic data protection in Europe. Policy-makers, professionals, and researchers who search for a complete and elaborated critical and legal framework for genetic research in (European) transnational constellations will certainly benefit from this volume. -- Hans Christian Wilms * European Journal of International Law, Volume 22, 2011 *
Nikolaus Forg is professor of law at the University of Hannover and a specialist in the field of data protection and data security. Regine Kollek is professor for technology assessment in the field of biotechnology at the University of Hamburg, and author of numerous relevant publications. Dr Marian Arning, Dr Tina Kruegel and Dr Imme Petersen are research fellows at the Universities of Hannover and Hamburg.