Office of Science & Technology - Patenting the Human Genome – The Ongoing Controversy
Menu Content/Inhalt

Podcast

This is the subscription link for bridges podcasts.

podcast
Please find more information in the podcast section
Patenting the Human Genome – The Ongoing Controversy Print E-mail

by Roland Vogl

and background information on
The Bayh-Dole Act –The Basis for U.S. Technology Transfer by Christian Neumann

This article seeks to provide a brief update on the continuing debate surrounding human gene patents, a subject that has produced considerable controversy in the international scientific community. The article describes the origins of the gene patenting controversy in the context of the general policy goals underlying the patent system. It also discusses the legal criteria supporting the patenting of isolated and purified human genes, as well as the general scope and limitations of gene patents in the U.S. and E.U. The author addresses the often misdirected question of “Who owns one’s genes?” as well, and examines the most controversial issues in the current gene patenting debate: The patentability of diagnostic tests and research tools, and the patenting of partial gene sequences, such as ESTs and SNPs (**).


Access to the full article is free, but requires you to register. Registration is simple and quick – all we need is your name and a valid e-mail address. We appreciate your interest in bridges.
 
Back to Top