Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
1 Ιουν 2014 · Organisms sometimes try to privatize resources to make them their property. • Property can solve the tragedy of the commons and allow for saving and investment. • Resources are privatized by force, hiding, incorporation and ownership convention. • Property is particularly important in social organisms. •
- Privatization and Property in Biology
Property is a neglected topic in biology, although examples...
- Defensive Plant-Ants Stabilize Megaherbivore-Driven Landscape Change in an African Savanna
Tree cover in savanna ecosystems is usually regarded as...
- Bacteriocin Diversity
The bacteriocin family is the most abundant and diverse...
- Privatization and Property in Biology
1 Ιαν 2015 · Ownership is the bundle of rights that includes allowing a person or entity to use and control an object as property. As biomedical science advances, we should consider whether human biological material should be recognized as property. Three main issues should be...
1 Νοε 2010 · Property owners generally have the right to use, sell, transfer, exchange, or destroy their property as they wish, and to exclude others from doing these things; bailees do not have similar rights in bailed property.
30 Απρ 2018 · What is the property status of information derived from human genetic samples? 1 Most importantly, does the originator of the information—the donor—have some form of private property right (morally and/or legally, wholly or partially), to that information?
This article considers some of the ethical and legal issues relating to the ownership and use – including for commercial purposes – of biological material and products derived from humans. The discussion is divided into three parts: after first ...
1 Ιουν 2014 · Many species must negotiate ownership of private property, immediately before and during copulation (e.g. food and other nuptial gifts, territories, extra-seminal fluids; see [6] for a review...
maintain no property interest in their excised cells, people continue to express the intuition that their genetic information belongs to them. Using property law theory, this Essay explores the competing ownership claims of the biotechnology industry and of contributors of genetic material.