Perspectives

Nature Reviews Genetics 5, 467-475 (June 2004) | doi:10.1038/nrg1351

OpinionIntegrating ethics and science in the International HapMap Project

Top

Genomics resources that use samples from identified populations raise scientific, social and ethical issues that are, in many ways, inextricably linked. Scientific decisions about which populations to sample to produce the HapMap, an international genetic variation resource, have raised questions about the relationships between the social identities used to recruit participants and the biological findings of studies that will use the HapMap. The sometimes problematic implications of those complex relationships have led to questions about how to conduct genetic variation research that uses identified populations in an ethical way, including how to involve members of a population in evaluating the risks and benefits posed for everyone who shares that identity. The ways in which these issues are linked is increasingly drawing the scientific and ethical spheres of genomics research closer together.

Author affiliations

  1. Morris W. Foster at the University of Oklahoma, Department of Anthropology, 455 W. Lindsey, Room 520, Norman, Oklahoma 73019-0535, USA.

Correspondence to: Email: fost1848@msmailhub.oulan.ou.edu

MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS

These links to content published by NPG are automatically generated.

NEWS AND VIEWS

Evaluating signatures of sex-specific processes in the human genome

Nature Genetics News and Views (01 Jan 2009)

Extra navigation

Subscribe

Subscribe to Nature Reviews Genetics

Search PubMed for

Open Innovation Challenges

naturejobs

natureproducts


Advertisement