Fr. 191.00

The Regulation of Embryo Testing in Australia - A Principles-based Approach

English · Hardback

Will be released 29.05.2025

Description

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This book examines the legal and ethical landscape of preimplantation genetic testing (PGT) in Australia, analyzing its current regulatory framework and exploring whether a more effective approach is needed. PGT allows prospective parents using assisted reproductive technology to select embryos based on genetic characteristics, raising complex ethical and legal questions. Should parents be permitted to test for and select against specific disabilities? Should there be limits on choosing certain traits? How should emerging technologies, such as screening for polygenic conditions and non-disease traits, be regulated?
To address these challenges, the book proposes a national, principles-based framework for embryo testing regulation. This framework calls for federal legislation and the establishment of a national regulatory body, guided by three key principles. The protective principle ensures that embryo testing prioritizes the welfare and future autonomy of the child. The beneficence principle allows parents to make decisions in the best interest of their future children. The balance principle applies in cases where embryo testing is used to create a saviour sibling and requires weighing the welfare of the future child against the needs of an existing sick sibling.
Through a doctrinal legal analysis, this book integrates perspectives from bioethics, disability studies, and philosophy to provide a comprehensive, interdisciplinary examination of embryo testing regulation. Accessible yet rigorous, it is an essential resource for legal scholars, policymakers, bioethicists, and anyone interested in the future of reproductive technology governance in Australia.

List of contents

Part I.- Embryo Testing: An Introduction.- The Regulation of Embryo Testing in Australia.- The Regulation of Embryo Testing in the UK.- Part II.- Selecting Against Disability.- Embryo Testing and the Use of Genome Wide Association Studies.- Reproductive Liberty and the Welfare of the Child.- Part III.- A Framework for Regulating Embryo Testing in Australia.- Conclusion.

About the author

Dr Michelle de Souza is a lecturer at the University of Western Australia Law School. She is also a member of the Western Australian Reproductive Technology Council. 
Michelle’s research interests are health law, bioethics and comparative healthcare law, with a particular focus on the beginning of life. Her work has been published in the Journal of Law and Medicine, the Journal of Law, Technology and Humans, The Conversation, BioNews and Times Higher Education.   
Michelle has a PhD from the University of Sydney, an LLM from Cardiff University and an LLB (Hons) from Swansea University. 

Summary

This book examines the legal and ethical landscape of preimplantation genetic testing (PGT) in Australia, analyzing its current regulatory framework and exploring whether a more effective approach is needed. PGT allows prospective parents using assisted reproductive technology to select embryos based on genetic characteristics, raising complex ethical and legal questions. Should parents be permitted to test for and select against specific disabilities? Should there be limits on choosing certain traits? How should emerging technologies, such as screening for polygenic conditions and non-disease traits, be regulated?
To address these challenges, the book proposes a national, principles-based framework for embryo testing regulation. This framework calls for federal legislation and the establishment of a national regulatory body, guided by three key principles. The protective principle ensures that embryo testing prioritizes the welfare and future autonomy of the child. The beneficence principle allows parents to make decisions in the best interest of their future children. The balance principle applies in cases where embryo testing is used to create a ‘saviour sibling’ and requires weighing the welfare of the future child against the needs of an existing sick sibling.
Through a doctrinal legal analysis, this book integrates perspectives from bioethics, disability studies, and philosophy to provide a comprehensive, interdisciplinary examination of embryo testing regulation. Accessible yet rigorous, it is an essential resource for legal scholars, policymakers, bioethicists, and anyone interested in the future of reproductive technology governance in Australia.

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