Biotechnology and the Challenge of Property: Property Rights in Dead Bodies, Body Parts, and Genetic InformationRoutledge, 2016. gada 15. apr. - 392 lappuses Biotechnology and the Challenge of Property addresses the question of how the advancement of property law is capable of controlling the interests generated by the engineering of human tissues. Through a comparative consideration of non-Western societies and industrialized cultures, this book addresses the impact of modern biotechnology, and its legal accommodation on the customary conduct and traditional beliefs which shape the lives of different communities. Nwabueze provides an introduction to the legal regulation of the evolving uses of human tissues, and its implications for traditional knowledge, beliefs and cultures. |
No grāmatas satura
6.–10. rezultāts no 84.
. lappuse
... economic pattern, societal organization and technological change. Some of the functions of property are also explored. It will be important to elaborate, for instance, how property has been used as a basis of expectation, and the way ...
... economic pattern, societal organization and technological change. Some of the functions of property are also explored. It will be important to elaborate, for instance, how property has been used as a basis of expectation, and the way ...
. lappuse
... economic dictates of any legal system. There is also growing evidence of the instrumentality of the fragmentation of property and the analytical utility of its malleability. The flexibilization of property has facilitated analyses of ...
... economic dictates of any legal system. There is also growing evidence of the instrumentality of the fragmentation of property and the analytical utility of its malleability. The flexibilization of property has facilitated analyses of ...
. lappuse
... economy that characterized many production systems in the past. The industrial revolution changed the production systems of a significant part of the Western world with the result that new forms of property emerged to diminish the ...
... economy that characterized many production systems in the past. The industrial revolution changed the production systems of a significant part of the Western world with the result that new forms of property emerged to diminish the ...
. lappuse
... economic factors: The change in common usage, to treating property as the things themselves, came with the spread of the full capitalist market economy from the seventeenth century on, and the replacement of the old limited rights in ...
... economic factors: The change in common usage, to treating property as the things themselves, came with the spread of the full capitalist market economy from the seventeenth century on, and the replacement of the old limited rights in ...
. lappuse
... economic and political circumstances of a particular legal system.117 Through legislation or regulation, governments may limit the exercise of an owner's property rights. Instances include taxation on property, and the power of eminent ...
... economic and political circumstances of a particular legal system.117 Through legislation or regulation, governments may limit the exercise of an owner's property rights. Instances include taxation on property, and the power of eminent ...
Saturs
Body | |
Statutory Limitation of Property Right in the Human Body | |
Cultural and Ontological Contexts of Biotechnology and | |
Corpse and Skeletal Remains | |
Impact of African Mortuary Law on Scientific and Biomedical | |
DNA Banks and Proprietary Interests in Biosamples | |
Property and Traditional Knowledge | |
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
Biotechnology and the Challenge of Property: Property Rights in Dead Bodies ... Remigius N. Nwabueze Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2007 |
Biotechnology and the Challenge of Property: Property Rights in Dead Bodies ... Dr Remigius N Nwabueze Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2013 |
Biotechnology and the Challenge of Property: Property Rights in Dead Bodies ... Remigius N. Nwabueze Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2016 |
Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes
African Anatomy Act Anatomy Act 1832 Antiquities Act application ayahausca Biodiversity biomedical Biopiracy Biotechnology bundle of rights burial cadavers Canada Canadian Canavan disease cause of action claim commercial common law concept of property Copyright corpse Court of Appeal cultural customary law database dead bodies deceased deceased’s defendant defendant’s developing countries DNA banks economic Environmental Law Ethics genes genetic information genetic material genetic resources Global Health human body Human Rights Human Tissue Ibid Iceland indigenous informed consent instance Intellectual Property Rights interference International Law invention issues Journal of International Law Journal Law Review legislation limited property Native American nervous shock Nigerian observed one’s Organization ownership person plaintiff plant possession potential property framework property interest Property Law protection of TK provides psychiatric injury recognized relating scientific supra Supreme Court Technology tissue samples tort traditional knowledge University Press unjust enrichment WIPO