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9 Ind. Int'l & Compar. L. Rev. 505 (1998-1999)
Human Cloning Research in Japan: A Study in Science, Culture, Morality, and Patent Law

handle is hein.journals/iicl9 and id is 511 raw text is: HUMAN CLONING RESEARCH IN JAPAN: A STUDY IN
SCIENCE, CULTURE, MORALITY, AND PATENT LAW
But only God can make a tree.'
I. INTRODUCTION
Movies and science fiction novels for years have depicted ancient and
exotic animals resurrected from extinction by mad scientists and out-of-this-
world phenomena. While in actuality we have yet to see any such
resurrections, the theoretical results once thought to be science fiction
fantasy have come a step closer to reality as powerful technology has been
developed which allows the production of genetically identical copies of
living, breathing animals through the process of cloning.  Cloning
technology carries moral, cultural, scientific and legal implications. Today,
researchers and scientists work diligently to develop groundbreaking
technology that must be protected through worldwide patenting of the fruits
of their labor. Recent advances in cloning and other scientific technology
have reached the point that there is virtually no life form which does not
have the potential as the subject of a patent application,2 including human
beings. Japan has been at the forefront of the development of cloning
technology. In the summer of 1998, Japanese researchers announced that
they had successfully cloned a cow. This success, combined with other
recent cloning developments throughout the world, immediately raised the
question of whether cloning could have human applications, and ultimately
whether human cloning was possible. Thus begins a debate that transcends
the realms of morality, culture, ethics, and the law.
Parts II and III of this note address scientific research in Japan in
general, and the science of cloning specifically. Part IV provides an
overview of the patent law system of Japan, and Part V discusses religious
and cultural influences on Japanese morality.  The note then turns
specifically to human cloning, beginning with Part VI which presents
arguments both for and against human cloning. Part VII describes why
human cloning is contrary to morality in Japan and asserts that there is no
need for governmental regulation of human cloning research in Japan
because Japan's patent law system provides both adequate regulation of the
technology and the flexibility to allow potentially useful technology to
emerge and to allow societal views to change.
1. 1 Joyce Kilmer, Trees, in 1 POEMS, ESSAYS & LErrERS 180 (Robert Cortes Holliday
ed., 1918).
2. Sally I. Hirst, Biopatents: A Sense of Order, TRENDS IN BIOTECHNOLOGY, Aug.
1992, at 63.

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