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      Everyday Cyborgs: On Integrated Persons and Integrated Goods

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          ABSTRACT

          Using the metaphor and actuality of the ‘everyday cyborg’, this article makes the case that the law is ill-equipped to deal with challenges raised by the linking of the organic, biological person with synthetic, inorganic parts and devices. For instance, should internal medical devices that keep the person alive be viewed as part of the person or mere objects (or something else)? Is damage to neuro-prostheses (eg nervous system integrated limb prostheses) personal injury or damage to property? Who ought to control/own the software in implanted medical devices? And how should the law deal with risks around third-party device access (including that of unauthorised access and hacking)? We argue that satisfactorily answering such questions will likely require a re-analysis of the conceptual and philosophical underpinnings of the law, as well as the law itself. To demonstrate this, we examine the uncharted terrain which everyday cyborgs pose for the law, looking in particular at five areas: (i) medical device regulation, safety, and product liability; (ii) damage to devices and liability; (iii) data and privacy; (iv) security and biohacking; and (v) intellectual property rights. The article highlights how advancing biotechnology continues to reveal, and prompts us to confront, lacunae within the law. Our analysis calls particular attention to law’s boundary-work (how the law utilises and incorporates supposed ontological and moral boundaries) and the challenges which everyday cyborgs pose to this.

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          Most cited references2

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          Ethical boundary-work in the embryonic stem cell laboratory.

          Most accounts of the ethics of stem cell research are de- contextualised reviews of the ethical and legal literature. In this chapter we present a socially embedded account of some of the ethical implications of stem cell research, from the perspectives of scientists directly involved in this area. Based on an ethnography of two leading embryonic stem cell laboratories in the UK, our data form part of the findings from a larger project mapping the scientific, medical, social and ethical dimensions of innovative stem cell treatment, focusing on the areas of liver cell and pancreatic islet cell transplantation. We explore three key issues: what individual scientists themselves view as ethical sources of human embryos and stem cells; their perceptions of human embryos and stem cells; and how scientists perceive regulatory frameworks in stem cell research. We argue that these dimensions of laboratory practice are all examples of 'ethical boundary-work', which is becoming an integral part of the routine practice and performance of biomedical science. Our work adds to the relatively few sociological studies that explore ethics in clinical settings and to an even smaller body of work that explores scientists' views on the ethical issues relating to their research.
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            Law and policy in an era of cyborg-assisted-life1: The implications of interfacing in-the-body technologies to the outer world2

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              Med Law Rev
              Med Law Rev
              medlaw
              Medical Law Review
              Oxford University Press
              0967-0742
              1464-3790
              May 2018
              22 February 2018
              22 February 2018
              : 26
              : 2 , Special Issue: Reflections on Bioethics and Law: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow
              : 276-308
              Affiliations
              [1 ]Birmingham Law School, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, B15 2TT, UK
              [2 ]Newcastle Law School, Newcastle University, 21-24 Windsor Terrace, Newcastle, NE1 7RU, UK
              Author notes
              Article
              fwy003
              10.1093/medlaw/fwy003
              5963303
              29481676
              dd3b5134-e430-452e-9bb0-2d74e59bd38c
              © The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press.

              This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

              History
              Page count
              Pages: 33
              Funding
              Funded by: Wellcome Trust 10.13039/100004440
              Award ID: 201675/Z/16/Z
              Categories
              Articles

              Law
              medical devices and prostheses,law’s boundary-work,data and privacy,biohacking,law,regulation,and technology,intellectual property rights

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