Difference between revisions of "Team:UNSW Australia/Human Practices/Law"

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<div id="legal-content" class="to-load">
 
<div id="legal-content" class="to-load">
 
<h2>Overview</h2>
 
<h2>Overview</h2>
<p>The legal frameworks surrounding synthetic biology are critically important because they determine what type of research can be undertaken, by selecting for research that is both legally allowable and has potential commercial implications. However, scientists often fail to most effectively lobby for frameworks that support what their research actually needs, instead acquiescing to government policy that bows to vested commercial interests.</p>
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<p>The legal frameworks surrounding synthetic biology are critically important because they determine what type of research can be undertaken, by selecting for research that is legally allowable, available and has potential commercial implications. However, scientists often fail to effectively lobby for frameworks that support their research needs whilst the current law remains inadequate.<sup><a href=#references>1</a></sup></p>
<p>As a result, UNSW iGEM 2018 has created a scientist’s guide to writing a policy proposal for government change and written an example submission. We have also documented our discussions with various stakeholders in the process, such as normal scientists and the government departments who receive the submissions. UNSW iGEM 2018 also collaborated with other student organisations, including the UNSW Law Society.</p>
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<p>Our UNSW team discovered, as part of our foray into commercialisation and due diligence on our scaffold elements, that biotechnological patent law is difficult to comprehend from the scientific perspective. In Australia particularly, the legal test for patents is long and convoluted, and requires a thorough understanding of previous cases.<sup><a href=#references>1</a></sup> However, our team successfully interpreted the law to conclude that our scaffold was not patentable (reinforcing our modular ‘Foundational Advance’ technology approach) and that we could use our preferred protein-protein bonding mechanism.</p>
<p>UNSW iGEM 2018 discovered, as part of our foray into commercialisation, that patent law for pieces of genetic information is hard to comprehend from the scientific perspective. This is particularly important for scientists, as without patents, it can make commercialisation of their discoveries hard, and thus dis-incentivise funding of their research. It is further complicated by the international nature of research meeting individual countries’ patent law regimes.</p>
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<p>Considering this context, the UNSW team has come up with a creative solution – we have created a scientist’s guide to writing a policy proposal for government change, and written an example submission. We have also documented our discussions with various stakeholders, including the pharmaceutical industry, intellectual property academics, the UNSW Law Society, and the 2018 Pasteur Paris iGEM team.</p>
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<p class=figure-legend><b>Figure 1:</b>Flowchart diagram of legal processes.</p>
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<h2>Relevance</h2>
 
<h2>Relevance</h2>

Revision as of 07:10, 15 October 2018

Law and Regulation