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Shaping a Culture of Safety and Security in Research on Emerging Technologies: Time to Move beyond “Simple Compliance” Ethics

Ethics and Integrity in Health and Life Sciences Research

ISBN: 978-1-78743-572-8, eISBN: 978-1-78743-571-1

Publication date: 6 December 2018

Abstract

Most research ethic review procedures refer to the principles of safety and security only as sub-criteria of other ethical principles such as the protection of human subjects in research, thereby ignoring the public good aspect of safety and security. In addition, Research Ethics Review Committees (RECs) are usually dominated by philosophers, ethicists, medical doctors, and lawyers with limited practical backgrounds in safety and security risk management. This gap of knowledge restricts ethics reviews in carrying out project-specific safety and security risk management and defers this responsibility to lawmakers and national legal authorities. What might be sufficient in well-regulated and well-understood environments, such as the safety of individuals during clinical research, is insufficient in managing rapidly changing and emerging risks – such as with emerging biotechnologies – as well as addressing the public good dimension of safety and security.

This chapter considers governance approaches to safety and security in research. It concludes that legal mechanisms are insufficient to cope with the complexity of and the fast progress made in emerging technologies. The chapter also addresses the role and potential of research ethics as a safety and security governance approach. It concludes that research ethics can play an important role in the governance of such risks arising from emerging technologies, for example through fundamental rights and public good considerations. However, in reality the current capacity of ethics in the safety and security governance of emerging technologies is limited. It is argued that in newly emerging areas of research currently applied legal compliance–based approaches are insufficient. Instead, inclusion of fundamental risk management knowledge and closer interactions between scientists, safety, and security experts are needed for effective risk management. Safety and Security Culture provide frameworks for such interactions and would well complement the current legal compliance–based governance approaches in research ethics.

Keywords

Citation

Ischi, M. and Rath, J. (2018), "Shaping a Culture of Safety and Security in Research on Emerging Technologies: Time to Move beyond “Simple Compliance” Ethics", Ethics and Integrity in Health and Life Sciences Research (Advances in Research Ethics and Integrity, Vol. 4), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 85-98. https://doi.org/10.1108/S2398-601820180000004006

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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