Freedom of Scientific Research and Embryo Protection Under Italian and European Court of Human Rights’ Jurisprudence. Brief European Legislation Overview

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-23
Author(s):  
Gianluca Montanari Vergallo

Abstract The paper addresses the issues of admissibility of human embryo research and the legal protection to be recognized, in light of the growing importance that scientific research has been gaining in the clinical and biomedical fields of embryonic stem cells for therapeutic purposes. As for human embryo experimentation, particularly on cryopreserved supernumerary embryos, European legislation varies, since the European Court has granted member States a wide margin of appreciation. Some countries, including Italy, have strict legislation protecting embryos from the fertilisation stage, whereas others have taken permissive approaches, allowing experimentation until 14 days after fertilisation. Science, however, has shown that the 14-day limit can be moved. The author finds it necessary to achieve broad international consensus and shared regulations. Lawmakers, however, need to balance respect for the principle of life, represented by the embryo, against scientific needs, in order to devise sound regulations safeguarding both apparently conflicting fundamental values.

Author(s):  
N. I. Gazina

The research on human embryos evolves rapidly, raising a number of ethical and legal issues and directly affecting human rights. Approaches to the legal regulation of human embryo research differ significantly from country to country. Some of them employ prohibitive practices (e.g. Switzerland and Italy), and the others have a regime that allows using embryos for scientific purposes with restrictions of different extent (e.g. the UK and Japan). There is no the international consensus on the issue of human embryo research. The objective of the article is to find out whether there are positions of the international bodies that may become or have already become the general guidance for different countries, allowing therefore to regulate effectively the use of human embryos for scientific purposes.The conclusion is drawn that there are positions of international bodies that may serve as the guidance within the regulation of the area concerned. States may enjoy a wide margin of appreciation within the framework of human embryo research regulation, considering the need to update their regulations regularly to harmonize them with the development of human rights and scientific progress and also to ensure a certain level of the embryo protection.


Author(s):  
Lian YU

LANGUAGE NOTE | Document text in Chinese; abstract also in English. It is an inspiring idea that public participation should be the key factor for determining the human embryo research policy. However, public participation is missing from the Chinese government's vision of an ethics regulation system for scientific research. This article argues that to develop human embryo research policy for China and a new regulation system globally, the most important tasks may be to set rules for public participation and to understand the views on human embryo and cell-based embryo research ethics held by different stakeholders and the Chinese public.


2001 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Meyer ◽  
Lawrence J. Nelson

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