DNA double helix

Bioethics web site

DNA double helix

The IHEU-Appignani Center for Bioethics has its own web site at www.humanistbioethics.org. The web site includes information about the Center's activities and events.

New Dilemmas in Medicine: Three Current Controversies in Genetics, Religion, and Big Pharma

DNA double helix
 United States of America

IHEU-Appignani Center for Bioethics and Bioethics International cordially invite you to a one-day conference concerning New Dilemmas in Medicine: Three Current Controversies in Genetics, Religion, and Big Pharma.

The Impact of Obstetric Fistula and Economic Empowerment

DNA double helix
 United States of America

The IHEU-Appignani Center for Bioethics is to co-sponsor a side event at the 52nd UN Commission on the Status of Women, on 3 March 2008 in New York City, USA.

Intersecting Human Rights Crises: Organ Transplantation and Organ Trafficking

DNA double helix
 United States of America

IHEU-Appignani Center for Bioethics in NYC co-sponsored by The UN Office of the Special Adviser on Gender Issues and the Advancement of Women (OSAGI) and The Council of Europe invite you to attend the panel:

Bioethics conference: Human Rights for the 21st century

DNA double helix
 United States of America

updated The IHEU-Appignani Humanist Center for Bioethics and The Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies present Human Rights for the 21st Century: Rights of the Person to Technological Self-Determination - May 11-13, 2007. We now have speaker details and abstracts available.

IHEU-Appignani Bioethics Center UN Panel on HIV/AIDS and female genital mutilation

DNA double helix
 United States of America
 United Nations news

On Wednesday, February 28, 2007 in New York, a panel of bioethicists, physicians and activists will discuss “Health and Empowerment: The impact of HIV/AIDS epidemic worldwide and Female Genital Mutilation in African Diaspora Communities” at the United Nations under the auspices of the Division for the Advancement of Women, Commission on the Status of Women.

Mr. Bush’s Respect for the Human Embryo

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 United States of America

The Status of the Human Embryo

Top bioethicists, physicians & psychiatrists to speak at UN panel: "Cognitive liberty in an age of neurotechnology"

DNA double helix
 United States of America

On Friday, Dec. 1, 2006, a panel of leading bioethicists, physicians & psychiatrists will discuss cognitive liberty at the United Nations. The meeting will be held on the 2nd floor of 777 UN Plaza in New York City, from 6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Who: IHEU - Appignani Center for Bioethics & the Alden March Bioethics Institute of Albany, N.Y.
What: UN Bioethics Panel Cognitive Liberty in an Age of Neurotechnology
Where:
777 UN Plaza, New York City, 2nd Floor
When:
Friday, Dec. 1, 2006, 6 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.

On a Communitarian Ethos, Equality and Human Rights in Africa

DNA double helix
 Kenya

1 Introduction

In this paper I shall look at the communitarians’ accounts of human rights in Africa as conceived by scholars writing on the African experience. I shall explore their understanding of the notion of equality, and their ideas on human rights in terms of a proclaimed African communitarian ethos and proceed with a critique of these notions. I argue that despite many African thinkers’ insistence that African communitarianism does encapsulate a respect for the individual’s rights, dignity and liberties, communitarianism (whether it be extreme or moderate) does not enfold a paradigm of individual human rights-claims, but instead embraces an authoritarian and sexist paradigm.

Global Bioethics Conference 2006

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 United States of America
 World-wide

The second Annual Conference on Global Bioethics was held on April 21-23, 2006 in New York. It was organized by the IHEU-Appignani Center for Bioethics in NYC and sponsored by Genetics Policy Institute and the Alden March Bioethics Institute of Albany. About 150 people attended the cocktail reception, among them UN missions, representatives of the IHEU member organizations from all over the world, diplomatic missions in the US, and humanist activists and academics. Approximately 70 people attended the conference sessions on Saturday and Sunday.

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