Abstract
This chapter identifies and evaluates Australian processes for developing policy with regard to embryo research, including the legislative process, the work of a legislative review committee, parliamentary debates, and the production of the National Health and Medical Research Council guidelines for such research. We examine various mechanisms used during each of these policymaking stages to engage various publics, and the procedures for balancing conflicting values, which were particularly evident given the strong promotion of biotechnology investment by government side by side with vigorous opposition to certain technologies by segments of the Australian community. We explore the ethical and democratic challenges posed by developments in embryo research as well as various difficulties that arose in engaging the Australian public during these policymaking processes, whether these might prove to be impediments to the development of justifiable and legitimate life sciences research policy in Australia, and what the future prospects are for productive and meaningful public engagement in these contentious areas.
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Notes
- 1.
We should place on the record the authors were among those who were invited to contribute to the public consultation process and the submissions made by the authors were quoted in the report.
- 2.
- 3.
The consultations process for this review included a call for public submissions and invitations and invitations to present at hearings of the review committee. There were 264 written submissions, of which 158 were provided in confidence (LRC 2011).
- 4.
These had been revised after information about the production of Dolly the sheep using cloning technologies become public in 1997. The Commonwealth government requested more detailed advice on cloning from AHEC, including recommendations for a regulatory model to align with international developments.
- 5.
In making submissions to the public consultation individuals or groups could elect to make a confidential submission to the review committee.
- 6.
It is arguable that other bodies which examine similar controversial bioethical issues, but which have different mandates, more effectively attend to establishing and fostering processes and frameworks for deliberation, such as the Australian Law Reform Commission and the New Zealand Bioethics Council.
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Acknowledgements
This research was supported by an Australian Research Council Discovery Grant “Big Picture Bioethics: Policy-Making and Liberal Democracy”, (DP0556068); research assistance by Fiona Mackenzie, Kerry Ross, Eliza Goddard, and Cobi Smith is gratefully acknowledged.
Versions of parts of this paper were previously published as
Rachel A. Ankeny and Susan Dodds. 2008. Hearing community voices: Public engagement in Australian embryo research policy, 2005–7. New Genetics and Society 27: 217–232. Reprinted with the permission of Taylor and Francis.
Susan Dodds and Rachel A. Ankeny. 2006. Regulation of hESC research in Australia: Promises and pitfalls for deliberative democratic approaches. Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 3: 95–107. Reprinted with the permission of Springer.
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Dodds, S., Ankeny, R.A. (2016). Public Engagement and Deliberation in Human Embryo Research Governance in Australia 2001–2011. In: Dodds, S., Ankeny, R. (eds) Big Picture Bioethics: Developing Democratic Policy in Contested Domains. The International Library of Ethics, Law and Technology, vol 16. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-32240-7_7
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