Description |
1 online resource (411 p.) |
Series |
Studies in International Criminal Law Ser |
|
Studies in International Criminal Law Ser
|
Contents |
Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction: The Emergence of International Criminal Biolaw: The Vehicle and Web of Interdisciplinary Norm-Synergies -- Editors' Acknowledgements -- Acknowledgements -- Part 1 Biolaw Crimes as Crimes against Humanity? Substantive Aspects -- Chapter 1 Human Experimentation at the Intersections of Biolaw and International Criminal Law: The Case of Unethical Clinical Trials in Developing Countries -- 1 The Business of Clinical Research in the Global South: Profit versus Ethics |
|
2 The Nuremberg Legacy: International Ethical Standards for Human Experimentation -- 3 Ethical Issues Concerning Clinical Research in Developing Countries -- 4 Accountability of States and non-State Actors for Unethical Clinical Research Involving Human Rights Violations -- 4.1 Accountability of Pharmaceutical Corporations -- 4.2 The Responsibility of Sponsoring and Host States -- 5 Unlawful Human Experimentation in International Criminal Law -- 5.1 Unlawful Human Experimentation as War Crime -- 5.2 Unlawful Human Experimentation as Crime against Humanity |
|
6 Seventy Years Later: Unethical Clinical Research and International Criminal Law -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 2 Are Non-Consensual Medical Interventions and Therapies to Change Sexual Orientation or Gender Identity a Crime against Humanity of Persecution against the lgbtiq Population under the icc Statute? -- 1 Non-Consensual Medical Interventions and Therapies to Change the Sexual Orientation or Gender Identity of lgbtiq Population are not an Issue of the Past -- 2 Gender as a Ground for Persecution under Paragraphs (1) (h) and (3) of Article 7 of the icc Statute |
|
3 Other Grounds that are Universally Recognized as Impermissible under International Law -- 4 Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- Chapter 3 The Case for Decoupling Unlawful Experiments from the Armed Conflict Nexus -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The link between Unlawful Medical Experiments and Armed Conflict in the Rome Statute -- 3 The Lack of Necessity and Indeed Undesirability of Linking Unlawful Medical Experiments to Armed Conflict -- 4 Conclusion -- Chapter 4 crispr/Cas9 technology: Ending Disease, Designer Babies, Eternal Youth, and 'Crimes Against the Species' |
|
1 What is the crispr/Cas9 Genome Editing Technology? -- 1.1 The Promising Aspects of crispr/Cas9 Technology -- 1.2 The Potential Dangers of crispr/Cas9 Applications -- 2 Genome Editing and the Law -- 2.1 Concerns about the Current Regulatory and Legislative Framework Surrounding crispr/Cas9 Technology -- 3 Gene Editing and Biolaw -- 3.1 The Problematic Aspects of the Biolaw Limits as Approached in the obd -- 3.2 Biolaw Limits and 'Ethics Creep' -- 4 Genome Editing and International Criminal Law - Is the Concept of 'Crimes Against the Human Species' in Relation to crispr/Cas9 Meaningful? |
Notes |
Description based upon print version of record |
|
Part 2 Norms and the Marketplace: Biolaw-Bioethics Mergers |
Subject |
Bioethics
|
|
Human experimentation in medicine -- Law and legislation -- Criminal provisions
|
|
Human experimentation in medicine -- Law and legislation
|
|
Bioethics.
|
|
Human experimentation in medicine -- Law and legislation.
|
|
Human experimentation in medicine -- Law and legislation -- Criminal provisions.
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
Author |
Matwijkiw, Anja
|
ISBN |
9789004364424 |
|
9004364420 |
|