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Uehiro Seminar: Cyborg justice: human enhancement and punishment

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
We explore some possible interactions between enhancement technology and punishment, reflect on ethical issues that arise as a result, and consider what our justice system must do in order to ensure that it keeps pace with developments in technology.
Criminal justice systems currently employ a limited range of penal sanctions to punish offenders. The type and nature of the sanctions employed are, in large part, determined by the penal aims a particular system is designed to pursue. However, they are also shaped by beliefs about what people are typically like, and by the resources available to develop and deploy punishments. Technology - particularly human enhancement technology - could change both of these latter influences. It could facilitate more effective punishments, support existing punishments, undermine certain punishments, make certain punishments more severe than was originally intended, and alter the resources available for punishments and the constraints on types of punishment.

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Uehiro Oxford Institute

St Cross Seminar: Genetic parenthood, assisted reproduction, and the values of parental love

I argue that the value of love in friendship illuminates issues about parental love and examine whether allowing same-sex couples access to adoption has any bearing on the moral status of prohibitions on same-sex couples using assisted reproduction.
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Uehiro Oxford Institute

Uehiro Seminar: The struggle between liberties and authorities in the information age

The talk discusses the balance between cyber security measures and individual rights - any fair and reasonable society should implement the former successfully while respecting and furthering the latter.
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Episode Information

Series
Uehiro Oxford Institute
People
Rebecca Roache
Anders Sandberg
Hannah Maslen
Keywords
human enhancement
ethics
technology
punishment
Department: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Date Added: 19/11/2013
Duration: 00:58:55

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