Open this publication in new window or tab >>1997 (Danish)Doctoral thesis, monograph (Other academic)
Abstract [en]
Biotechnology and genetic engineering raise a number of new ethical problems. Consequently, over the past 15 years, several European countries, including the Nordic countries, have passed new laws in an attempt to deal with the ethical problems posed by biotechnology. These developments raise the question of how to formulate legislation to regulate both the technical and ethical aspects of biotechnology and genetic engineering. Is it indeed possible to formulate a valid ethical framework in a thoroughly secularised society? How has this been coped with politically? And what is the nature of the relationship between ethics, politics and the law, that emerges from this process? The regulation of biotechnology is very often carried out by legal means in modern society. The thesis shows that the distinction between ethics, politics and the law - inherent in the Scandinavian tradition of legal realism - is not sustained in the law preparatory Process in the fields of biotechnology and genetic engineering in Denmark, Norway and Sweden. The analysis reveals that the tendency for ethics, politics and the law to merge is expressed in the new normative reflexivity which characterizes legislation in this area. The thesis defines this process in terms of four elements: a proceduralisation of ethics, a democratisation of ethics; negotiated development of norms, and a moralisation of politics and the law. These new tendencies suggest a need for a new analytical framework. The thesis argues that reflexive law theory and discourse ethics theory can provide a more adequate understanding of the new normative reflexivity inherent in the legislation examined. In a society characterised by moral, social, cultural and political pluralism it is of profound importance to contemplate how legal and political norms are developed. Furthermore, it is highly pertinent to consider how we can conceive these processes in theoretical terms.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Linköping: Linköpings universitet, 1997. p. 321
Series
Linköping Studies in Arts and Science, ISSN 0282-9800 ; 169
Keywords
Ethics, Bioethics, Law, Legal Positivism, Legal Realism, Discourse Ethics, Reflexive Law, Legislation, Law Preparatory Process, Biotechnology, Genetic Engineering, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Politics
National Category
Social Sciences Interdisciplinary
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-34385 (URN)21393 (Local ID)91-7219-126-0 (ISBN)21393 (Archive number)21393 (OAI)
Public defence
1998-01-23, Planck, Fysikhuset, Campus Valla, Linköpings universitet, Linköping, 13:15 (English)
Supervisors
2009-10-102009-10-102018-01-13Bibliographically approved