How medical technology is changing who we are

By Bob Carty

OTTAWA, February 2, 2002 — This series was first aired on CBC Radio over a six-day period beginning on January 6, 2002 and is reposted with

Globalizing research

By Alexander Cohen

Across Asia, biotechnology sector thrives

Special report: Dim chance for global cloning ban

By M. Asif Ismail

More than 150 countries have no law on the books that bars reproductive cloning
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A human rights issue

By M. Asif Ismail

In Europe, nations ban reproductive cloning, but allow research to continue

Where scientists call the shots

By Tamra Traubmann

Advanced capabilities and lax regulation put Israel on the leading edge of cloning

Favorable logistics

By Claudio Julio Tognolli

In Brazil, infrastructure and human resources for cloning are available
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International cloning timeline

By Alexander Cohen

Tracking embryo research and cloning efforts from 1996 to 2004

In Congress, a cloning stalemate

By M. Asif Ismail

Efforts to ban cloning falter over scope of proposed prohibition

Excerpts from this story referencing "Human cloning":

"… echnology at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), told the Center."Human cloning is unsafe," echoed University of Pennsylvania bioethicist Arthur Caplan. " …"

Closing in on human cloning

By M. Asif Ismail and Agustín Armendariz

The federal government is funding research in primate cloning technology. Why?

Regulating cloning

By M. Asif Ismail

The biotech industry pushes its agenda in the states

Excerpts from this story referencing "diabetes":

"… ychological burden of chronic, degenerative, and acute diseases, including diabetes, Parkinson's disease, cancer, and Alzheimer's disease."Lawmakers involved …"

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