Youth Forum
10.05.2023
14:00–15:30

Biotechnology: To Curtail or to Expand? The Ethics and Law for Those Upholding Traditional Values

Congress Centre, conference hall B2
International Youth Legal Forum
Broadcast
Scientific progress is a natural consequence of improving living standards, better education, increased knowledge, and growing investment in research. Over the course of several centuries, industrialists have been willing to invest heavily in research, particularly in relation to developing competitive products, reducing production costs, or improving individual stages of product promotion. Ultimately, the goal was one of increasing profits. Thanks to scientific and technological progress, people today are able to solve many of their problems. Infertile couples can have children; organ transplants can be performed on people who would have previously had no chance of survival; and children born with genetic diseases can be treated. Technology has also helped to increase crop yields and do much else to combat famine. A lot of routine medical operations can be entrusted to artificial intelligence, with an increase in productivity and quality as a result. All this, however, has major legal implications, which require careful study and assessment. These include ethical and legal risks associated with the use of such technologies in situations falling under civil and family law. These are life-changing technologies, and not only for the user. Assisted reproductive technologies have allowed children to be born whose biological and social parents are different. These children’s legal family status continues to be ambiguous. Scientific and technological progress is a fact of life. It is not the task of the legal field to halt it, but to adapt traditional regulation in line with scientific accomplishments and new opportunities. What approach should be taken to assessing the legal and ethical risks of using biotechnology today? What legal mechanisms exist to protect the interests of society, the state and the public in relation to the use of biotechnology? What should be done to protect the rights of children and parents in relation to the use of assisted reproductive technologies?

Moderator

Natalia Kozlova
Head of the Scientific Department – Deputy Dean for Research, Faculty of Law of the Lomonosov Moscow State

Panellists

Elena Bryzgalina
Head of the Department of Philosophy of Education, Faculty of Philosophy, Lomonosov Moscow State University
Oleg Grin
Director, Scientific and Educational Center for Law and Bioethics in the Field of Genomic Research and Application of Genetic Technologies, Kutafin Moscow State Law University (MSAL)
Nelly Diveeva
Professor of the Department of Labor Law and Labor Protection, St. Petersburg State University
Nikita Malyutin
Associate Professor of the Department of Constitutional and Municipal Law, Faculty of Law, Lomonosov Moscow State University; Chairman, Council of Young Scientists of the Faculty
Lidia Mikheeva
Secretary, Civic Chamber of the Russian Federation; Chairman of the Council (Head), S.S. Alekseev Research Center for Private Law under the President of the Russian Federation (online)
Sofia Filippova
Associate Professor of the Department of Commercial Law and Fundamentals of Jurisprudence, Faculty of Law, Lomonosov Moscow State University

Front row participant

Ekaterina Kirsanova
Senior Research Fellow, Center for Scientific Research, All-Russian State University of Justice

Broadcast