|  |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| On Vampires and Chromosomesby George Estreich, Biopolitical Times guest contributor, Biopolitical TimesMay 9th, 2013The vampires of the Twilight books have superpowers due to two extra chromosomes. In our fang-free human life, however, having extra chromosomes is not usually seen as a plus. |
| How are Humans Going to Become Extinct?by Sean Coughlan, BBC NewsApril 25th, 2013Experiments in areas such as synthetic biology, nanotechnology and machine intelligence are hurtling forward into the territory of the unintended and unpredictable.
|
| Neo Neanderthal[With CGS's Pete Shanks]by Alyona Minkovski, HuffPost LiveJanuary 25th, 2013A leading geneticist at Harvard Medical School says he can clone a Neanderthal and resurrect the extinct species. What are the ethical issues, risks and benefits? |
| Biotech's 10 Biggest PR Disasters of 2012GMWatchDecember 31st, 20122012 was the year the lights came up on the biotech industry. Its claims, its tactics and its products all came under scrutiny and some of its biggest PR fairytales bit the dust. Here are some prime examples. |
| Of Monsters and Menby George Estreich, Biopolitical Times guest contributor, Biopolitical TimesNovember 29th, 2012The Amazing Spider-Man’s focus on genetic modification is more than incidental.
|
| "Splice" is an Infertile Hybridby Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesJune 8th, 2010The movie Splice is neither deep enough to be interesting nor shocking enough to succeed as horror. |
| Promises, Promisesby Stuart Blackman, The ScientistNovember 1st, 2009Ill-judged predictions and projections can be embarrassing at best and, at worst, damaging to the authority of science and science policy. |
| The rise and fall of hybrids in the UKby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesOctober 20th, 2009The remarkable push by UK researchers for animal-human hybrid embryos is another strange tale of science politics and science policy. |
| Strange New World[Book Review]by Jeanette Winterson, The New York TimesSeptember 20th, 2009Margaret Atwood's new novel, "The Year of the Flood," takes place in the same bioengineered world as her 2003 work of speculative fiction, "Oryx and Crake." |
| Would you like them with a mouse?by Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesAugust 3rd, 2009Japanese scientists report that mice have (almost) been fooled into making mammoth eggs. |
| Transgenic Mice: Human, All Too Human?by Marcy Darnovsky, Biopolitical TimesJune 3rd, 2009How human must a humanized animal be before we begin to worry? What if our experimental creatures begin to display some degree of human consciousness? And once we're worried, what do we do? |
| Draft federal stem cell policy gets it rightby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesApril 17th, 2009The NIH's new draft guidelines are consistent with President Obama' previous comments and public opinion, and also draw the right lines. |
| More cloning, but still no stem cellsby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesFebruary 12th, 2009Three more research teams have created clonal human embryos, but none reported deriving stem cells from them. |
| Human Genetic Diseases in Dogs?by Pete Shanks, Biopolitical TimesFebruary 5th, 2009Dog cloning is a means to an end, say those who are selling it. Human-dog experimental chimeras are a more significant goal than pet replacement. |
| UK's Prime Minister Brown vs. scientistsby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesMay 22nd, 2008Like so many writings advocating cloning-based stem cell research, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown's recent op ed drifts to distortion and hyperbole. |
| Robert Winston on the UK's fertility billby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesMay 13th, 2008Assisted reproduction pioneer Lord Robert Winston had some surprising words about the UK's controversial bill to overhaul its oversight of the reproduction industry and stem cell research. |
| Cloning Alternative May Help Save White Rhinoby Roger Highfield, TelegraphApril 18th, 2008A novel kind of reproduction is to be used to help save one of the world's rarest animals - the northern white rhino - which is on the brink of extinction. The idea is to create cells from a white rhino and blend them with the embryos of a close cousin, the southern white rhino, to create an interspecies chimera. |
| Facts on the Groundby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesApril 2nd, 2008One need not be that cynical to believe that British cloning researchers are trying to change the "facts on the ground" for the upcoming debate. |
| An Embryonic Disaster?The government’s new fertility bill is under fire on religious, moral and even scientific groundsby Isabel Oakeshott and Sarah-Kate Templeton, The Sunday TimesMarch 16th, 2008The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill is designed to regulate just how far scientists can go when experimenting on embryos or embryo parts. It will also lay down new boundaries for fertility clinics, setting out the circumstances in which controversial techniques for screening embryos for defects, or gender, are allowed. |
| Singapore to create animals with human DNADPAJanuary 9th, 2008Scientists eager to splice human genes with animal cells are seeking a public feedback on the prospect of such controversial research, the Bioethics Advisory Committee (BAC) said on Wednesday. |
| Moving the Goalposts on Hybridsby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesOctober 12th, 2007In recent years, biologists have been advocating the use of various human-animal constructs in their work. They seem to get what they want. In fact, they may now be getting more than they even asked for. |
| The Old Gray Lady's "Distressing" Editorialby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesSeptember 25th, 2007It's distressing to see the nation's leading newspaper characterize informed choices about health risks -- choices unswayed by thousands of dollars -- as unacceptable barriers to scientific research. |
| Making Manimalsby William Saletan, Washington PostJune 25th, 2007If you've been laughing at those Neanderthal presidential candidates who still don't believe in evolution, it's time to sober up. Every serious scientist knows we evolved from animals. The question now is whether to put our DNA and theirs back together. |
| File Under: Coming Soon?by Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesJune 21st, 2007A recent report by the UK's Academy of Medical Sciences leaves the door open for the creation of "'true' hybrid embryos by mixing human and animal gametes." |
| Experts Slam UK Decision to Allow Human-Animal Embryos, Relax RulesGenetic CrossroadsMay 31st, 2007The British government released its draft recommendations for overhauling regulation of assisted reproduction and embryo research. The most noticed change was the lifting of research prohibitions on creating several kinds of human-animal embryos. |
| Pushing the Chimeric Envelopeby Osagie K. Obasogie, Biopolitical TimesMarch 30th, 2007It was reported this week that Esmail Zanjani at the University of Nevada has created the first human-sheep chimera, with 15% human cells. |
| USDA Backs Production of Rice With Human Genesby Rick Weiss, Washington PostMarch 3rd, 2007The Agriculture Department has given a green light for the first commercial production of a food crop engineered to contain human genes, reigniting fears that biomedically potent substances in high-tech plants could escape and turn up in other foods |
| Anything Goesby Wesley J. Smith, The Weekly StandardFebruary 14th, 2007The International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR) recently announced its "Guidelines for the Conduct of Embryonic Stem Cell Research." The results are not encouraging. |
| Playing the fear cardby Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesJanuary 10th, 2007The idea of creating human-animal hybrids is initially deeply repulsive. Although many people may imagine something out of Planet of the Apes, at least one proposal is less problematic than what it would supplant. |
| O Brave New World? No thanks.by Jesse Reynolds, Biopolitical TimesNovember 9th, 2006The popular science blogger Pharyngula not only defends the proposal in the UK to use cow eggs in research cloning, but calls for the resulting mostly-human clonal embryo to be implanted and brought to term - in a cow's uterus. |
| Mixing animal and human cells gets more exoticby Paul Elias, Associated PressJune 18th, 2006"The mixing of human and animal cells in the name of medicine has been going on for decades. People are walking around with pig valves in their hearts and scientists have routinely injected human cells into lab mice to mimic diseases." |
| Of Mice, Men and Stem-Cell Researchby Osagie K. Obasogie, San Francisco ChronicleFebruary 20th, 2006President Bush's State of the Union address highlighted several key policy issues, such as America's dependency on foreign oil, the ongoing war in Iraq and Baby Boomers' impact on Social Security. But the president's call for legislation to prohibit scientists from creating "animal-human hybrids" caught many by surprise; the term was one of the most popular Internet searches in the hours following his speech. |
| Averting the clone age [PDF]Prospects and perils of human developmental manipulationby Stuart Newman, Journal of Contemporary Health Law and PolicyNovember 30th, 2002 |
| It's worth copying Canada's model for cloning legislationby Richard Hayes, Seattle TimesJune 3rd, 2002The United States should take the Canadian experience to heart. A broad and informed debate is essential if we are to realize the best and avoid the worst that the new genetic technologies have to offer. We cannot afford to do less on a matter of such consequence. |
| POINTERS Genetic CrossroadsSeptember 10th, 1999 |
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
|  |
|