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  1. The "Special Status" of the Human Embryo in the United Kingdom: An Exploration of the Use of Language in Public Policy.David Jones - 2011 - Human Reproduction and Genetic Ethics 17 (1):66-83.
    There is an apparent gap between public policy on embryo research in the United Kingdom and its ostensible justification. The rationale is respect for the “special status” of the embryo, but the policy actively promotes research in which embryos are destroyed. Richard Harries argues that this is consistent because, the “special status” of the human embryo is less than the absolute status of persons. However, this intermediate moral status does no evident work in decisions relating to the human embryo. Rather, (...)
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  • Embryo disposition and the new death scene.David Ellison & Isabel Karpin - 2011 - Cultural Studies Review 17 (1):81-100.
    In the IVF clinic - a place designed principally for the production and implantation of embryos - scientists and IVF recipients are faced with decisions regarding the disposition of frozen embryos. At this time there are hundred of thousands of cryopreserved embryos awaiting such determinations. They may be thawed for transfer to the woman herself, they may be donated for research or for use by other infertile couples, they may remain in frozen storage, or they may variously be discarded by (...)
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