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From Eugenics to Human Gene Editing: Engineering Life in China in a Global Context

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Uehiro Oxford Institute
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In November 2018, a Chinese scientist announced the birth of the world’s first gene-edited babies and sparked outrage across the world. Professor Nie considers how China's complex socio-ethical approach paved the way for this controversial experiment.
Among numerous ethical issues, editing heritable germline genomes of otherwise healthy embryos for natural resistance to HIV constitutes an effort of positive eugenics, i.e. not treating disease but enhancing genetic features. This paradigm case of scientific misconduct has its roots in the widespread practice of yousheng (eugenics) in China and in the nation’s pursuit of science superpower status. This talk will offer a (brief) socio-ethical inquiry into how the ideologies of nationalism, sinicised social Darwinism and scientism have shaped the Chinese authoritarian model of human genetic engineering in a global context.

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Episode Information

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
People
Jing-Bao Nie
Keywords
eugenics; gene-editing; China; CRISPR
Department: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Date Added: 07/10/2019
Duration: 00:47:03

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