
Is South Africa ready for the future of human germline genome editing? Comparing South African law and recent proposals for global governance
Author(s) -
Tamanda Kamwendo,
AUTHOR_ID,
Bonginkosi Shozi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
south african journal of bioethics and law
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1999-7639
DOI - 10.7196/sajbl.2021.v14i3.761
Subject(s) - genome editing , corporate governance , political science , crispr , order (exchange) , law , biology , business , management , genetics , economics , finance , gene
Over the past few years, developments in the science of precise editing of human genomes using CRISPR-Cas9 have led many countries that lack specific laws in this area, such as South Africa (SA), to contemplate legal reform. Thaldar et al. recently published five principles to guide legal reform in SA on heritable genome editing. In a similar vein, concerns about the global impact of human germline genome editing have led to calls for a global regulatory mechanism. This is what the World Health Organization has tried to achieve with the recently published ‘Draft governance framework for human genome editing’. In this article, we compare the policies proposed by the draft framework to the current SA legal position, as well as the five guiding principles. The article concludes that SA law is in need of reform in order to meet the global standards that the draft framework seems to be moving towards.