the molecular economy and legal challenges
Post on 18-Dec-2014
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The Molecular Economy: Global Consequences and Legal Challenges In
Asia
by Greg Beatty
The Challenge of Law in Asia: From Globalization to Regionalization?
Bangkok
2
Agenda
What is the Molecular Economy? Why is the Molecular Economy relevent to lawyers and
law professors in Asia? What are the Legal Challenges in Asia? Globalization to Regionalization?
“Our most powerful 21st-century technologies – robotics, genetic engineering, and nanotech – are threatening to make humans an endangered species” Bill Joy,
former Chief Scientist,
Sun Microsystems
3
Thesis: The ME is Relevant to the Asian Legal Community
Asia is on the cutting edge: Researchers at Hanyang University in South
Korea successfully create human embryos through cloning
Suranaree University of Technology in Thailand has successfully cloned sixteen claves and a Brahman ox
4
Molecular Economy Initiatives in Asia
Atomic Force Microscope purchases:
USA: 1,699
China: 54
Taiwan: 115
India: 7
Japan: 1,083
South Korea: 69
Singapore: 40
Australia: 33
Source: The ETC Group, 2003
5
Why is the Molecular Economy Important?
New ethical debates of how we want to progress
Legal issues will become increasingly steeped in science, technology and ethics
Is the interface between technology and law awry?
6
The Molecular Economy Defined
What is the Molecular Economy?
Two technological themes in this Molecular Economy:
(i) scientists are acquiring a greater understanding of the molecules that control chemical and biological functions
(ii) the super-miniaturization of manufacturing
7
Is the Molecular Economy Relevant to Lawyers Now?
“With the knowledge of how to split an atom, we can release immense energy from materials, and with the capability to manipulate genes we can practically create new life forms. Our dilemma is made more urgent from the fact that we now have the technological capability to do things that we do not yet know for sure are good, bad, right or wrong.”
Yongyuth Yuthavong,
Senior Researcher,
Thailand Biotec Center
8
The Molecular Economy Technologies
What is biotechnology? The simulation and manipulation of the fundamental life processes at the
cellular and molecular levels
The use of biology for technology, using living organisms and their parts to produce useful products and services
What is nanotechnology? The word “nano” describes physical scale, derived from the Greek word
“nanos”, meaning “dwarf”
One billionth of a meter, or approx. 1/50,000 of the width of a human hair
How are they different from other emerging technologies of the past?
9
The Molecular Economy Technologies – cont’d
What is the impact of convergence?
A new social configuration of sciences accelerates discovery and the ability to engineer living matter at the molecular level
What is the significance to the legal community?
10
The Leading Regional Issues for Asia
Agri-business
The Hamlet dilemma re Natural Resources: To Protect or Not to Protect?
To Exploit or Not to Exploit?
11
Legal Challenges
How to assess risk appropriately
What are the targets?
Who should be regulated – Developers? Sellers? Users?
Precautionary principle?
How to create a level playing field in a global context
How to gain a better understanding the science, technology and ethics
12
Globalization to Regionalization?
Asia’s Response
Soft Law
A broad set of rules, principles and guidelines
Non-binding
Governance
Considers legal, philosophical and social issues within a broad regulatory framework
Non-binding
Flexible
13
Next Steps
In this techno-centric world, legal practitioners are no longer just being asked to be mere legal experts on Black Letter Law or be effective dispute resolvers; we are being asked to assume the role of public philosophers and techno-
futurists.
Currently, few lawyers, judges and academics worldwide are prepared for the challenge of steering societies through the technological trajectories that are being posed in the Molecular Economy.
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