Genetic Enhancement - A Threat to Human Rights?

Genetic enhancement is the modification of the human genome for the purpose of improving capacities or 'adding in' desired characteristics. Although this technology is still largely futuristic, debate over the moral issues it raises has been significant. George Annas has recently leveled a new attack against genetic enhancement, drawing on human rights as his primary weapon. I argue that Annas' appeal to human rights ultimately falls flat, and so provides no good reason to object to genetic technology. Moreover, this argument is an example of the broader problem of appealing to human rights as a panacea for ethical problems. Human rights, it is often claimed, are 'trumps': if it can be shown that a proposed technology violates human rights, then it must be cast aside. But human rights are neither a panacea for ethical problems nor a trump card. If they are drafted into the service of an argument, it must be shown that an actual human rights violation will occur. Annas' argument against genetic technology fails to do just this. I shall conclude that his appeal to human rights adds little to the debate over the ethical questions raised by genetic technology.

[1]  R. Andorno Biomedicine and international human rights law: in search of a global consensus. , 2002, Bulletin of the World Health Organization.

[2]  L. Knowles,et al.  The Lingua Franca of Human Rights and the Rise of a Global Bioethic , 2001, Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.

[3]  R. Baker,et al.  Bioethics and Human Rights: A Historical Perspective , 2001, Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.

[4]  D. Thomasma Proposing a New Agenda: Bioethics and International Human Rights , 2001, Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics.

[5]  R. Baker A Theory of International Bioethics: The Negotiable and the Non-Negotiable , 1998, Kennedy Institute of Ethics journal.

[6]  J. Mann Medicine and public health, ethics and human rights. , 1997, The Hastings Center report.

[7]  M. Nussbaum Capabilities and Human Rights , 1997 .

[8]  M. Nussbaum Social Justice and Universalism: In Defense of an Aristotelian Account of Human Functioning , 1993, Modern Philology.