Nanolaw Ethics: A Janus Approach with Contemporary Human Rights
Title:
Nanolaw Ethics
Subtitle: A Janus Approach with Contemporary Human Rights
Subject Classification:
Law and Legal Ethics, Politics and Government, Science
BIC Classification: LA, TB, JPVH
BISAC Classification:
SCI050000, POL035010, LAW099000
Binding:
Hardback, eBook
Publication date:
18 Mar 2024
ISBN (Hardback):
978-1-80441-575-7
ISBN (eBook):
978-1-80441-576-4
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Description
This book explores the ethical and legal dilemmas of nanotechnology with a focus on human rights. As in nanotechnology and nanomedicine, it utilizes a similar approach in law to address present and future issues in nanotechnology that looks to past and present law with new understanding to not only prepare for the future but address existing contemporary issues – a ‘Janus Approach’.
Nanotechnology brings unprecedented technological revolution. However, it comes with heightened ethical and legal concerns. Nanotechnology is now present in every aspect of life, without full public awareness. Some branches of nanotechnology utilize human DNA, and affect humans in a multitude of unprecedented ways. Legal and ethical issues have been long discussed, they tend to be managed in individual fields, rather than taken as a whole.
Ethical concerns are especially important for vulnerable populations such as targeted minority groups or people from the Global South.
This book provides a realistic minimalist ethical solution that can be applied to any situation, utilizing a human rights-based approach for universal application. This encompasses ethics based on Aristotelian principles into technology and the public good. The book includes case examples addressing past, present and future concerns.
Biography
Author(s): Andrei Twibell is an immigration attorney in Alexandria, Virginia who writes on law, human rights and nanotechnology and has global experience with US Embassies, the UN and NGOs as a refugee officer, and also serves as an asylum officer with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
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