is leading a three-week discussion on the legal and social implications of advances in biotechnology, starting today. Her brings together anthropologists, sociologists, legal scholars, historians, cultural theorists and political philosophers from around the world.
鈥淔rom gene therapies to curing diseases to organ transplant aided by cryopreservation, revolutionary biotechnologies have attracted significant hype for their potential to improve the human condition 鈥 but their growing application raises legal and ethical questions that can only be answered with the help of humanities and social sciences research,鈥 says Dr Van Wichelen, director of the University鈥檚 聽and 2018聽.
With technology evolving faster than our legal systems, it is time to discuss the use of these techniques before they go before the courts.
鈥淎ustralian regulators, in particular, need to work out how to put suitable regulations in place to protect human rights without inhibiting the scientific advances possible in this country.鈥
At the Pop-Up Lab, experts from Australia, Asia, Europe and the US will explore how new biotechnologies trouble foundational legal principles of personality, personal rights, humanity, property, parenthood, and community. 聽
鈥淚n the three decades since the Human Genome Project determined the sequence of genes that make up human DNA, we have witnessed profound debates on how these new technologies are redefining society, politics, and legalities,鈥 said Dr Van Wichelen.
In a series of workshops, roundtables, master classes and panel events, participants will discuss:
For more information on individual events please聽.
The Pop-Up Lab is an initiative of the University鈥檚聽.
Based in the University of Sydney鈥檚聽, the聽Sydney Social Sciences and Humanities Advanced Research Centre (SSSHARC)聽aims to advance landmark interdisciplinary research in the humanities and social sciences and beyond. 聽and more.聽