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+ | <p> To understand if synthetic biology products and cell-free systems were regulated around the world, we researched relevant legislation. Table 1 is an overview of the regulations that we could find that are implemented in the four legal systems used as was suggested to us by Ian Andrews (link to silver). | ||
<p> <b><center>Table 1. Overview of regulations related to the implementation of biotechnology and organismal based devices in society by legal system. </b></p> | <p> <b><center>Table 1. Overview of regulations related to the implementation of biotechnology and organismal based devices in society by legal system. </b></p> |
Revision as of 17:16, 28 October 2017
Insert Paragraph Discussing What we did and why
Protocol Simplification
Experimental Design
Professional Development
Regulation Research
To understand if synthetic biology products and cell-free systems were regulated around the world, we researched relevant legislation. Table 1 is an overview of the regulations that we could find that are implemented in the four legal systems used as was suggested to us by Ian Andrews (link to silver).
Legal System | Civil | Common | Mixed | Religious |
---|---|---|---|---|
Laboratory Safety | General guidelines implemented, national frameworks being updated |
General guidelines implemented in regulations, committees in place to oversee concerns |
General guidelines implemented in regulations, committees in place to oversee concerns |
National biosafety frameworks in the process of being developed, have signed the Cartagena Protocol |
GMO Regulations | In place, appropriate labelling required in most cases to identify GMO status Generally strict regulations in place (EU, JPN) |
In place, usage differs depending on country though most countries allow (notable exception: NZ) | Dependent on country: some follow EU regulations and restrict access while others are in the process of developing legislation with minimal regulations currently |
In place, only allow certain crops, need proper labelling to identify GMO status |
Environmental Regulations | Environmental impact assessments used to determine effect on biological diversity, environmental release addressed |
Environmental impact assessments used to determine effect on biological diversity, environmental release addressed | Environmental impact assessments used to determine effect on biological diversity, some countries have in place environmental release stipulations |
Environmental impact assessments used to determine effect on biological diversity, developing more specific legislation for environmental release |
Agricultural Regulations | Regulations mostly relate to field trials | Must be approved by regulatory body to not cause a negative impact on the environment |
Dependent on country: some have strict regulations on crops that can be planted while others have regulations in place, but allow a greater crop diversity |
Regulations relate to type of crops that can be planted |
Health Regulations | Must be approved by governing authority to not have negative impacts | Must be approved by governing authority to not have negative impacts | Must be approved by governing authority to not have negative impacts, some countries are still in the process of developing legislation |
In development with the growth of biotechnology, general regulations state that new materials generated must be approved |
Regulation Area | Canada | United States |
---|---|---|
Health | Assisted Human Reproduction Act (HC):
|
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDA) Public Health Services Act (FDA):
|
Environment | Canadian Environmental Protection Act (EC and HC):
|
National Environment Policy Act (EPA:
|
Food/Pharmaceuticals | Food and Drugs Act (CFIA):
|
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FDA) Public Health Service Act (FDA) :
|
Agriculture | Seeds Act (CFIA) Canada Agricultural Products Act (CFIA):
|
Agricultural Act Federal Seed Act (APHIS) Plant Protection Act (APHIS) :
|
Pests | Pest Control Act (PMRA):
|
Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (EPA):
|
Microorganisms | Canadian Environmental Protection Act (EC and HC):
|
Toxic Substances Control Act (EPA):
|
Animals | Health of Animals Regulations (CFIA):
|
New Animal Drug Application (FDA):
|
Pathogens and Toxins | Human Pathogens and Toxins Act (PHAC):
|
Toxic Substances Control Act (EPA):
|
System Safety Features
The exploration of our plan on how to address the genetic re-coding aspect of our project continues more in depth on our software page. We consider it to be a major part of our human practices, but to explain it as in depth as it requires, we felt it deserved its own page.