Top Biopolitical Times Posts of 2015

Biopolitical Times

In 2015, CGS staffers and guest contributors posted 80 blogs at Biopolitical Times. Some were syndicated on our guest blog at Psychology Today, Genetic Crossroads.

Fourteen of our favorite posts plus a series by CGS staffers are shown below in chronological order. Scroll down for posts by our wonderful guest contributors.

Staffers

 

 

Contributors and Fellows

A number of remarkable guest bloggers on Biopolitical Times contributed their commentary on a wide variety of issues during 2015. Not much for choosing favorites among our friends, we do want to extend our appreciation for their time and perspectives. In alphabetical order:

George Annas on inheritable genetic modification: The Moral Imperative for Psychologists

Naomi Cahn on donor gametes:The Rights of Donor-Conceived Offspring

Katayoun Chamany on precision medicine: New Rules Proposed to Address Privacy and Trust in the Precision Medicine Initiative

Nathaniel Comfort on inheritable genetic modification: Putting Ourselves in Harm's Way: Thoughts on Pinker and the Role of Bioethics

Colleen Cordes on synthetic biology: DIY Bio-Engineering: Disrupting Democracy

Gwen D’Arcangelis on biosecurity: U.S. Bioweapons Research: Are Anthrax Lab Accidents All We Have to Fear?

Sayantani DasGupta on donor gametes: Why Facebook’s Egg Donor Ads Freak Me Out (And Should Freak You Out Too)

George Estreich on genetic screening: FDA Regulation and Early Prenatal Testing; de-extinction: Of Clocks and Mammoths: The Pitch for De-Extinction; new film releases: Ex Machina: Of Screens and People; and inheritable genetic modification: The Rhetorical Two-Step: Steven Pinker, CRISPR, and Disability

Jaydee Hanson on eugenics reparations: Virginia Votes Compensation for Victims of its Eugenic Sterilization Program

CGS Fellow Lisa Ikemoto on CRISPR/Cas9: Fast Forward-Pause-Stop: The 3-Speed Human Germline Debate; and donor gametes: “High IQ Eggs Wanted” – ads appeal to ego and altruism, offer $10,000

Ricki Lewis on genome sequencing: Universal Newborn Genome Sequencing and Generation Alpha

CGS Fellow Gina Maranto reviewing Deborah Lynn Steinberg's Genes and the Bioimaginary: Genetic Facts, Genetic Reality, Genetic Imaginaries; on precision medicine: "Moonshot Medicine": Putative Precision vs. Messy Genomes; and egg retrieval: Seeking Your Input: Survey on Egg Retrieval

Stuart Newman on inheritable genetic modification: Pinker's Damn: A Naive Rejection of Controls Over Genetic Engineering