Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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878030
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Main Entry
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Ruggiu, Daniele
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Title & Author
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Human Rights and Emerging Technologies : : Analysis and Perspectives in Europe /\ Daniele Ruggiu ; foreword by Roger Brownsword.
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Publication Statement
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Singapore :: Pan Stanford Publishing,, 2018.
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Page. NO
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1 online resource
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ISBN
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0429490593
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: 0429955359
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: 0429955367
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: 0429955375
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: 9780429490590
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: 9780429955358
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: 9780429955365
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: 9780429955372
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9789814774932
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9814774936
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Bibliographies/Indexes
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Contents
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Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; Foreword; Table of Legislation; Table of Cases of the European Court of Human Rights and the Court of Justice of European Union; PART I; Introduction; 1 Human Rights and Technoscientific Development; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 The International Framework on Human Rights and Scientific and Technological Developments; 1.3 The EU Framework of the Charter of Fundamental Rights; 1.4 The Council of Europe Framework and the Oviedo Convention and Its Protocols
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1.5 The Issue of Compulsory Jurisdiction of the Strasbourg Court for the Economic and Social Aspects of Human Rights1.6 The Rise of a Renewed Interest for Emerging Technologies; 2 Governance: A Theoretical Framework; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Governance and Meta-governance; 2.3 The 'New Turn of Governance'; 2.4 The Theoretical Framework of the Relationship between Law and 'New Governance'; 2.5 Soft Law: Nature, Justification, Functions, and the Issue of Its Legitimation; 2.6 Soft Law and Corporate Social Responsibility; 3 The European Governance of Emerging Technologies; 3.1 Introduction
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3.2 The EU Governance of Emerging Technologies: The Case of Biotechnology3.3 The EU Governance of Emerging Technologies: The Case of Nanotechnologies; 3.4 The EU Governance of Emerging Technologies: The Case of Synthetic Biology; 3.5 The Rising Model of the Responsible Research and Innovation; 3.6 Rights-Based Models of Governance of Emerging Technologies; PART II; Introduction; 4 Human Dignity; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 The Challenge of Human Genetic Modification; 4.3 The State's Discretion in Ethical Controversial Issues
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4.4 The Case Law of the Strasbourg Court on the Life of the Unborn and Reproductive Rights4.5 The Framework of the Council of Europe as a Reference Point of the Judges in Strasbourg; 5 Right to Health; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 The Right to Health's Entry to the Sphere of the ECHR; 5.3 The Strasbourg Court Jurisprudence Related to Health; 6 Consent; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 The Self-Determination Principle; 6.3 The Strasbourg Court Jurisprudence Related to the Consent to Medical Treatments Aimed at Enhancing Human Performances; 7 Right to Bodily Integrity; 7.1 Introduction
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7.2 Assistive Technologies and the Decision of Modifying One's Own Body7.3 The Strasbourg Court Jurisprudence Related to the Right to Bodily Integrity; 8 Right to a Healthy Environment; 8.1 Introduction; 8.2 Human Rights and the Environmental Issue; 8.3 The Strasbourg Court Jurisprudence Related to the Right to a Healthy Environment; 9 Privacy; 9.1 Introduction; 9.2 The Right to Privacy and Digital Technologies in the Workplace; 9.3 The Strasbourg Court Jurisprudence Related to Privacy; 10 Freedom of Scientific Research; 10.1 Introduction
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Abstract
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What is the state of current European governance on new and emerging technologies, and where is it going? What is, and what can be, the role of human rights in governance arrangements? These are the main questions that this book answers for both European and non-European scholars. It provides a wide picture of current European governance, notably in biotechnology, nanotechnology and synthetic biology, and discusses the model of Responsible Research and Innovation, which is gaining popularity within the European Union, under a human rights perspective. It shows how human rights can contribute to governance frameworks without posing obstacles to research and innovation. The theory presented in the book is followed by practical guidelines drawn from human rights law. Starting from the Strasbourg Court jurisprudence, it provides a complete review of the wide range of rights that the European Convention on Human Rights protects in light of the challenges of techno-scientific advances. This analysis will come in handy for private actors, policymakers, regulators, as well as judges in solving hard cases raised by techno-scientific progress in the future.
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Subject
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Human rights-- Europe.
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Subject
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Technological innovations-- Social aspects-- Europe.
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Subject
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Technological innovations-- Europe-- Management.
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Subject
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Human rights.
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Subject
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LAW-- International.
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Subject
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Technological innovations-- Management.
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Subject
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Technological innovations-- Social aspects.
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Subject
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Europe.
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Dewey Classification
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341.481
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LC Classification
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KJC5132.R84 2018
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Added Entry
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Brownsword, Roger
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