What might the amazing developments in stem cell research mean for our future, and what are the ethical questions that we need to grapple with as the science develops?
Join science journalist Marnie Chesterton in this four-part series, as she talks to Dr Naomi Moris from The Francis Crick Institute, and Professor Emily Jackson, expert in medical law at the London School of Economics.
Visit newfactsof.life to share your thoughts and help shape the future of this science
All content for The New Facts of Life is the property of The Liminal Space and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
What might the amazing developments in stem cell research mean for our future, and what are the ethical questions that we need to grapple with as the science develops?
Join science journalist Marnie Chesterton in this four-part series, as she talks to Dr Naomi Moris from The Francis Crick Institute, and Professor Emily Jackson, expert in medical law at the London School of Economics.
Visit newfactsof.life to share your thoughts and help shape the future of this science
One day it might be possible to grow our own tissue or embryo models in remote personal biobanks. What would that make them: part of us? Or new entities entirely? A new horizon of ethics and regulation is approaching; in our final episode we ask how lawyers are thinking through these questions and more.
Visit newfactsof.life to share your thoughts and help shape the future of this science
The New Facts of Life
What might the amazing developments in stem cell research mean for our future, and what are the ethical questions that we need to grapple with as the science develops?
Join science journalist Marnie Chesterton in this four-part series, as she talks to Dr Naomi Moris from The Francis Crick Institute, and Professor Emily Jackson, expert in medical law at the London School of Economics.
Visit newfactsof.life to share your thoughts and help shape the future of this science