About this Research Topic
Together with our online workshop, this Research Topic aims to gather scholars from the fields of political science, public policy, regulation, law, economics, sociology, anthropology and related disciplines who are interested in the use and impact of gene editing on society. We welcome papers that especially address – without being limited to – the following issues:
• To what extent are the possibilities offered by gene editing adequately covered by existing regulations?
• Are there gaps in regulation that might allow harmful or dangerous innovations? Or conversely are there prohibitions in current regulations that might inhibit desirable applications of gene editing?
• Is it possible, or desirable, to co-ordinate regulation of gene editing across sectors and jurisdictions, and if so how might this be orchestrated?
• What role should the government have in the development and oversight of gene editing technologies?
• Do gene editing technologies and gene editing organisms raise any new issues for intellectual property rights or exacerbate any existing challenges?
• How differently are gene editing technologies regulated across countries?
• How does the development of gene editing technologies affect the political economy of the agriculture sector and related international trade?
• How does the development of gene editing technologies affect the political economy of the pharmaceutical sector and healthcare?
• How does gene editing affect international development? What opportunities or challenges does gene editing pose for Low and Middle Income Countries?
• How does gene editing impact the environment and biodiversity?
• What are the prospects for and politics of human enhancement through gene editing?
• How might gene editing affect the discourse and practice of human rights?
Keywords: Gene-Editing, CRISPR, Regulation, Governance, Political Economy, Health Care, Human Rights
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.