The concept of sepulchral rights in Canada and the USA in the age of genomics: hints from Iceland

Analysis of law relating to the human body and its parts is accentuated by increasing genomic research utilizing human body tissues. (1) No doubt, the human genome project is the largest and most representative paradigm of such modern biomedical research endeavors. (2) Genomic research studies the f...

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Main Author: Nwabueze, Remigius Nnamdi
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/73520/
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spelling ftsouthampton:oai:eprints.soton.ac.uk:73520 2023-07-30T04:04:25+02:00 The concept of sepulchral rights in Canada and the USA in the age of genomics: hints from Iceland Nwabueze, Remigius Nnamdi 2005-01 https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/73520/ unknown Nwabueze, Remigius Nnamdi (2005) The concept of sepulchral rights in Canada and the USA in the age of genomics: hints from Iceland. Rutgers Computer & Technology Law Journal, 31 (2), 217-284. Article PeerReviewed 2005 ftsouthampton 2023-07-09T21:09:17Z Analysis of law relating to the human body and its parts is accentuated by increasing genomic research utilizing human body tissues. (1) No doubt, the human genome project is the largest and most representative paradigm of such modern biomedical research endeavors. (2) Genomic research studies the function of individual genes in the human body and how they interact with one another and the environment. Advocates of genomics argue that it will help explain the genetic basis of diseases and shed light on therapeutic interventions. (3) To carry out genomic research, however, scientists need to obtain bodily materials, tissue samples and relevant health information from human sources. In some circumstances, samples may be obtained from deceased persons. Though genomics promises enormous health benefits, it raises significant social, ethical, and legal concerns. (4) For instance, genetic information obtained from a tissue sample may relate to intimately private matters such as race, height, susceptibility or predisposition to disease, behavioral traits, and sex. This type of information reaches beyond the sample source to family members and its illegitimate exploitation could have wide-ranging impacts entailing ostracism, discrimination in employment, and insurance. (5) Accordingly, the right to control current and future uses of a genetic material or information obtained from it has become pivotal. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Southampton: e-Prints Soton
op_collection_id ftsouthampton
language unknown
description Analysis of law relating to the human body and its parts is accentuated by increasing genomic research utilizing human body tissues. (1) No doubt, the human genome project is the largest and most representative paradigm of such modern biomedical research endeavors. (2) Genomic research studies the function of individual genes in the human body and how they interact with one another and the environment. Advocates of genomics argue that it will help explain the genetic basis of diseases and shed light on therapeutic interventions. (3) To carry out genomic research, however, scientists need to obtain bodily materials, tissue samples and relevant health information from human sources. In some circumstances, samples may be obtained from deceased persons. Though genomics promises enormous health benefits, it raises significant social, ethical, and legal concerns. (4) For instance, genetic information obtained from a tissue sample may relate to intimately private matters such as race, height, susceptibility or predisposition to disease, behavioral traits, and sex. This type of information reaches beyond the sample source to family members and its illegitimate exploitation could have wide-ranging impacts entailing ostracism, discrimination in employment, and insurance. (5) Accordingly, the right to control current and future uses of a genetic material or information obtained from it has become pivotal.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Nwabueze, Remigius Nnamdi
spellingShingle Nwabueze, Remigius Nnamdi
The concept of sepulchral rights in Canada and the USA in the age of genomics: hints from Iceland
author_facet Nwabueze, Remigius Nnamdi
author_sort Nwabueze, Remigius Nnamdi
title The concept of sepulchral rights in Canada and the USA in the age of genomics: hints from Iceland
title_short The concept of sepulchral rights in Canada and the USA in the age of genomics: hints from Iceland
title_full The concept of sepulchral rights in Canada and the USA in the age of genomics: hints from Iceland
title_fullStr The concept of sepulchral rights in Canada and the USA in the age of genomics: hints from Iceland
title_full_unstemmed The concept of sepulchral rights in Canada and the USA in the age of genomics: hints from Iceland
title_sort concept of sepulchral rights in canada and the usa in the age of genomics: hints from iceland
publishDate 2005
url https://eprints.soton.ac.uk/73520/
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation Nwabueze, Remigius Nnamdi (2005) The concept of sepulchral rights in Canada and the USA in the age of genomics: hints from Iceland. Rutgers Computer & Technology Law Journal, 31 (2), 217-284.
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