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Vol. 2, No. 1, 2004
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[ contents ] Vol.2,
No.1, 2004 pp:
36-47
Australia’s
Regulation Of Genetically Modified Crops:
Are We Risking Sustainability?
Author: Fern Wickson |
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abstract |
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The commercialisation of genetically modified
(GM) crops is being accompanied by a debate with scientific,
social, ethical, legal and metaphysical dimensions. In the
face of this complex debate, governments need to regulate
GM crops in a way that minimises negative impacts on biological
and social environments. This paper is a critical examination
of Australia’s regulatory framework for the deliberate
environmental release of GM crops, specifically in terms
of its ability to advance ecologically and socially sustainable
agriculture. Following a description of the novel nature
of GM crops, I discuss how the approach selected, the definition
of key terms and the parties being granted influence exclude
social and ethical concerns from regulatory deliberation
and threaten the development of socially sustainable agriculture.
Threats to ecologically sustainable agriculture from the
framing of GM crop regulation are discussed in relation to
how the selected approach deals with ecological uncertainties
and the baseline being used for acceptable risk comparisons..
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Fern
Wickson is a PhD candidate at the University of Wollongong
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