Abstract
Does it serve a democracy to prohibit or permit parents to engage in genetic selection? In this essay, Michael Bé rubé investigates the possibilities of not-too-distant technologies to select against genetic features and how our laws should restrict or allow certain reproductive practices. Bé rubé provides a reading of the science-fiction film Gattaca in which he points out that the movie’s futuristic setting takes for granted that society would endorse genetic screening. In the film, detecting a genetic anomaly is self-evident justification for terminating an embryo. Bé rubé argues against this assumption, but only as far as childbirth isn’t considered mandatory for such embryos either. Rather, he insists that it is more consistent with democratic principles to allow prospective parents to choose for themselves. Citing the work of Ruth Hubbard, this essay explains the difficulties in maintaining an individual’s abortion rights while also fighting a social stigma against disabled people that shapes prenatal choices. Bé rubé envisions a world in which rigorous debate focuses on screening certain conditions while also refusing to equate disability with disease or consider disabilities solely in the terms of cure or elimination. Democracy, he tells us, does not have to honor all personal preferences in order to honor individual autonomy in decision-making. Although eugenicists have historically focused on larger populations, modern genetic screening can be understood as a “private” or individual version of the same principles. But taking a libertarian stance by making genetics a private choice doesn’t adequately account for any kind of social good. For disabled people, Bé rubé claims, there is no realm of the wholly private because living with disability is always a matter for public policy. Disabled people must play a part in the democratic deliberation that shapes these policies.
Original language | English (US) |
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Title of host publication | The Disability Studies Reader, Fifth Edition |
Publisher | Taylor and Francis |
Pages | 87-101 |
Number of pages | 15 |
ISBN (Electronic) | 9781317397861 |
ISBN (Print) | 9781138930223 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Jan 1 2016 |
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- General Social Sciences