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Do You Follow Surrogacy360?
Surrogacy360, a project of CGS, provides unbiased and comprehensive resources about the health, legal, and ethical issues surrounding international commercial surrogacy — information you won’t find elsewhere online. Follow our work on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram!
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Marcy Darnovsky Gives TEDx Talk
CGS Executive Director Marcy Darnovsky was an invited speaker at TEDxLagunaBlancaSchool 2020, where she told an audience of 600 about the risks of heritable human genome editing. Keep an eye on the CGS newsletter to see Marcy’s TEDx video!
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Katie Hasson to Participate in Doha Debates
CGS Program Director on Genetic Justice Katie Hasson will be on the stage in Qatar this March to debate the future of human heritable genome editing. Watch your inbox, or follow CGS on Twitter and Facebook, for a link to the live debate, scheduled for March 11.
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CRISPR’s Twisted Tales: Clarifying Misconceptions about Heritable Genome Editing
Marcy Darnovsky and Katie Hasson, Perspectives in Biology and Medicine | Winter 2020
Widespread agreement about He Jiankui’s recklessness and dire ethical violations concealed deep fault lines among participants in the debate on heritable genome editing and revealed significant shortcomings in the discourse surrounding it.
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Gene-Edited 'Haves' and 'Have-nots' at Davos
Pete Shanks, Biopolitical Times | 02.10.2020
The Global Risks Report, prepared for this year’s World Economic Forum at Davos, added elite recognition to the alarms that CGS and many others have been sounding about human heritable genome editing. For grassroots activists and advocates, having our talking points repeated in such high-power settings is a good thing.
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Germline Modification Could Be New Frontier of Reproductive and Disability Oppression
Emily Galpern, Biopolitical Times | 01.30.2020
CGS and Black Women for Wellness have released an infographic and fact sheet articulating a reproductive justice perspective against human germline modification. Reproductive justice advocates are uniquely positioned to change the conversation about germline editing in mainstream media, public conversation, and policymaking.
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A Tipping Point for DNA Tests and Surveillance Technologies?
Pete Shanks, Biopolitical Times | 01.28.2020
23andMe is laying off 100 of its 700 staff, a decision made in the context of growing public concerns about privacy and corporate control and moves toward better regulation of these technologies.
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Genetic Justice: Identity and Equality in the Biotech Age
Katie Hasson and Mary Darnovsky, Development | 01.14.2020
The prevailing position on heritable genetic modification in international policy and human rights documents has been that, due to its numerous safety and social risks, it should be legally off limits. However, as genetic technologies merge with forensics, medicine, and human reproduction, renewed eugenic temptations are arising.
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Layoffs Result as Consumers Think Twice About DNA Testing
David Lazarus, Los Angeles Times | 01.15.2020
Consumers are getting wise to the fact that testing firms make additional money by sharing user data with drug companies and law enforcement. Says CGS Executive Director Marcy Darnovsky, “I wouldn’t take one of these tests.”
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Embryo Research To Reduce Need For In Vitro Fertilization Raises Ethical Concerns
Rob Stein, NPR | 01.15.2020
The study involved artificially inseminating women and extracting any resulting embryos for testing and potential future use in IVF treatments. While the procedure could eventually offer a simpler way for some couples to have healthy children, some scientists view the Mexico-based study—which paid the participants the local equivalent of two month’s wages—as unethical.
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FamilyTreeDNA Admits to Sharing Genetic Data With F.B.I.
Matthew Haag, The New York Times | 02.04.2020
Unbeknown to its users, the company voluntarily agreed to open its database of more than two million records to the F.B.I. to identify suspects and victims of unsolved rapes and murders.
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DNA Collection at the Border Threatens the Privacy of All Americans
Daniel I. Morales, Natalie Ram, and Jessica L. Roberts, The New York Times | 01.23.2020
On January 6, the federal government began collecting DNA from any person in immigration custody, a step toward collecting and tracking large numbers of US citizens’ genetic information.
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