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Engineering biological diversity: the international governance of synthetic biology, gene drives, and de-extinction for conservation

Jesse L. Reynolds

2020Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the face of insufficient progress in conserving and restoring biodiversity, the in situ use of advanced genetic modification, gene drives, and other biotechnologies for conservation purposes are being considered, researched, and developed. This paper introduces the methods, applications, environmental risks, and social challenges of ‘conservationist synthetic biology’; reviews existing governance, with an emphasis on international instruments, institutions, and processes; and offers observations of the politics of developing further governance. The most important multilateral environmental agreement is the Convention on Biological Diversity. Governance of such conservationist synthetic biology is vital but gaps remain. The further development of governance is a political process, and conservationist synthetic biology has a political landscape that is atypical for emerging technologies.

Topics & Concepts

Convention on Biological DiversityCorporate governanceSynthetic biologyPoliticsBiodiversityEnvironmental planningDiversity (politics)BiologyPolitical scienceProcess (computing)Environmental resource managementEcologyBiotechnologyEnvironmental ethicsBusinessComputational biologyGeographyEconomicsLawComputer scienceOperating systemFinancePhilosophyCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringGenetically Modified Organisms ResearchBioeconomy and Sustainability Development
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