Abstract

The 2005 UNESCO Universal Declaration of Bioethics and Human Rights (UDBHR) is specifically aimed at Africa and developing countries from other regions. The acceptance of this UNESCO instrument shows that global bioethics and human rights have become part of the bioethics discourse of today. It is clear that there is a certain affinity between human rights and bioethics, which makes such a link desirable. The value of this link lies in the fact that human rights facilitate a normative universal expansion of bioethical principles. The human rights framework provides bioethical principles with some authority and political influence, an instrument that can protect people in our broken context. Human rights practice and a reformed understanding of natural law both show that humanity can reach consensus on ethical principles such as those found in the UDBHR. Consensus on the theoretical foundation of human rights is not a prerequisite for the successful utilisation of these principles.

Highlights

  • Global bioethics and human rights in an African context: A reformed theological discourse on global bioethics as a new human rights ethos

  • The 2005 UNESCO Universal Declaration of Bioethics and Human Rights (UDBHR) is aimed at Africa and developing countries from other regions. The acceptance of this UNESCO instrument shows that global bioethics and human rights have become part of the bioethics discourse of today

  • After the Second World War various intergovernmental and international organisations have come into being, like the European Council, UNESCO, WHO, the Council for International Organizations of Medical Sciences and the World Medical Association (WMA), all of which established ethical guidelines related to bioethics

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Summary

Original Research

Global bioethics and human rights in an African context: A reformed theological discourse on global bioethics as a new human rights ethos. The 2005 UNESCO Universal Declaration of Bioethics and Human Rights (UDBHR) is aimed at Africa and developing countries from other regions. The acceptance of this UNESCO instrument shows that global bioethics and human rights have become part of the bioethics discourse of today. It is clear that there is a certain affinity between human rights and bioethics, which makes such a link desirable The value of this link lies in the fact that human rights facilitate a normative universal expansion of bioethical principles. Consensus on the theoretical foundation of human rights is not a prerequisite for the successful utilisation of these principles

Problem statement
Open Access
The UDBHR as a global bioethics
The universal nature of the declaration
The link between bioethics and human rights
Affinity between bioethics and human rights
Normative expansion of framework of human rights principles
Arguments against a link between a global bioethics and human rights
Differences regarding the foundation
Agreement on principles
Natural law as foundation for a global bioethics
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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