BEGIN:VCALENDAR
PRODID:-//Grails iCalendar plugin//NONSGML Grails iCalendar plugin//EN
VERSION:2.0
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260501T181630Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20140819T050000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20140819T050000
SUMMARY:Conceptualizing Disability as a Public Health Issue: Impairment\, Enhancement and Emerging Biotechnologies
UID:20260505T113608Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-6b96c54f56-bljdq
TZID:America/Toronto
LOCATION:Geneva\, Switzerland
DESCRIPTION:<p>There is broad evidence indicating that the total number of persons experiencing disability has<br>increased substantially in recent times. Emerging biotechnologies offer the possibility to affect and<br>transform (and disrupt) many aspects of life of those labelled as having a disability. In recent decades\,&nbsp\;developments in prosthetics technology and other biotechnologies designed to restore &lsquo\;impaired&rsquo\;&nbsp\;physical functioning have raised pressing ethical\, social and legal questions about the category of&nbsp\;&lsquo\;disability&rsquo\;. In emerging fields such as biomechatronics&mdash\;technology that combines human physiology&nbsp\;with electromechanics&mdash\;we see much more than the restoration of the body to some notion of &lsquo\;native&rsquo\;&nbsp\;or &lsquo\;normal&rsquo\; functioning\, but the concrete possibilities of super human enhancement.<br><br>As the possibilities for bodily &lsquo\;restoration\,&rsquo\; enhancement and augmentation arising from emerging<br>biotechnologies\, in the context of &lsquo\;correcting&rsquo\; disability\, become concrete realities\, pressing questions&nbsp\;emerge within public health policy\, biomedicine and disability ethics. These questions concern both&nbsp\;conceptual challenges in terms of delimiting concrete categories\, with respect to parameters such as&nbsp\;&lsquo\;treatment&rsquo\;\, &lsquo\;enhancement&rsquo\;\, &lsquo\;normal&rsquo\;\, &lsquo\;disability&rsquo\; and &lsquo\;impairment&rsquo\;\, while also concerning practical&nbsp\;matters for public health bodies regarding the allocation of resources\, research and development of&nbsp\;biotechnologies\, the &lsquo\;ability rat race&rsquo\; (raising the bar of what is considered &lsquo\;normal&rsquo\; or &lsquo\;adequate&rsquo\;&nbsp\;functioning)\, issues around inclusion and exclusion with respect to treatment and services\, and the</p>\n<p>extent to which restrictions on enhancement technologies are ethically defensible. Theoretically the<br>possibilities for the development of disability-diminishing technologies are limitless but only a<br>fraction of these may ever be developed. How is technology development prioritised &ndash\; does it relate<br>solely to profitability? Should prioritisation depend on the societal benefits that might be expected to&nbsp\;deliver to those with the greatest need rather than on the fiscal gain? Should pubic policy have a role&nbsp\;in determining which technologies are developed and made available?<br><br>We welcome proposals for papers that engage with these themes.<br><br>Please send an abstract (500 words) and a CV by August 19\, 2014 to:<br><br>Barry Lyons\, Bioethics\, School of Medicine\, Trinity College Dublin &ndash\;&nbsp\;<a>balyons@tcd.ie</a>or<br><br>Luna Dolezal\, Dept of Philosophy\, Trinity College Dublin\, Ireland &ndash\;<a>Luna.dolezal@tcd.ie</a></p>
ORGANIZER:
METHOD:PUBLISH
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
