Dr. Gary E. Marchant
The article Scholars debate whether to limit scientific research said
ASU’s College of Law Center for the Study of Law, Science, & Technology will play host to a conference titled ‘Forbidding Science? Balancing Freedom, Security, Innovation and Precaution’… The conference will explore whether scientific research should be restricted — and, if so, how far “too far” might be.
“We have reached a point in human history where some of the scientific research we could do, perhaps we should not do for safety, national security or ethical reasons”, says Gary Marchant, executive director of the center. “We therefore must choose, for the first time, which science should be allowed, and which should not. How, and by whom, such decisions should be made will be the focus of this timely and path-breaking conference.”
Gary E. Marchant, Ph.D., J.D. is Lincoln Professor of Emerging
Technologies, Law & Ethics, College of Law, Executive Director of Center
for Law, Science & Technology, and Professor of School of Life Sciences
at the Arizona State University. He received a B.Sc. with Honors in
Genetics from the University of British Columbia in 1980, a Ph.D. in
Genetics from the University of British Columbia in 1986, a Master of
Public Policy from the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard
University in 1990, and a J.D. magna cum laude from Harvard Law School
in 1990. (He ranked number one out of 540 students and
received the special Fay Diploma from Harvard Law School
for this accomplishment!)
Gary was Editor-in-Chief of
Harvard Journal of Law & Technology, Editor
of
Harvard Environmental Law Review, and Vice-President of
Harvard Law &
Technology Society. He was a Partner of Kirkland & Ellis in
Washington,
D.C. where he represented clients in cases before the U.S. Supreme Court.
He is a member of the American Bar Association, Environmental Law
Institute, Air & Waste Management Association, American Association for
the Advancement of Science, Society for Risk Analysis, New York Academy
of Sciences, Society for Social Studies of Science, and Associate Editor
of
Nonlinearity in Biology, Toxicology, and Medicine.
He is
author of
Liability insurance coverage for hazardous waste liabilities: Research
pathfinder,
Freezing carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions: An offset policy for slowing
global
warming,
coauthor of
Arbitrary and Capricious: The Precautionary Principle in the European
Union Courts, and coauthor of the innovative Amazon digital
downloads
Shifting sands: the limits of science in setting risk
standards
and
The EPA’s risky reasoning: recent revisions to the air quality
standards
show a worrisome misuse of science.