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Framing and legitimating EU legal regulation of human gene-editing technologies: key facets and functions of an imaginary

Aurélie Mahalatchimy, Pin Lean Lau, Phoebe Li, Mark Flear

2020Journal of Law and the Biosciences13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Gene-editing technologies, ie those able to make changes in the DNA of an organism, are the object of global competition and a regulatory race between countries and regions. There is an attempt to craft legal frameworks protective enough for users, but flexible enough for developers of gene-editing technologies. This article examines the imaginary built into the framing of EU-level legal regulation of human gene-editing technologies and identifies its three key related facets: the tension around naturalness; safeguarding morality and ethics; and the pursuit of medical objectives for the protection of human health. Concerns around the use of gene-editing technologies in relation to eugenics and human enhancement have produced a multifaceted imaginary. We argue that this imaginary not only places a limit on EU-level regulation, despite a strong EU competence in respect of the internal market, but also seeks to ensure its legitimation.

Topics & Concepts

The ImaginaryFraming (construction)SafeguardingHuman enhancementEmerging technologiesPolitical scienceSociologyLaw and economicsLawComputer scienceBiologyGeneticsEngineeringMedicineArtificial intelligencePsychologyPsychotherapistStructural engineeringNursingCRISPR and Genetic EngineeringBiomedical Ethics and RegulationNeuroethics, Human Enhancement, Biomedical Innovations
Framing and legitimating EU legal regulation of human gene-editing technologies: key facets and functions of an imaginary | Litcius