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Centre for Applied Ethics receives R1.6 million in research funds | |
The Centre
for Applied Ethics was awarded more than R1.6 million for research over
the next four years. The
Centre, which is attached to the Philosophy Department at the University
of Stellenbosch, is a service and research body that focuses on the values
and ethics that underpin
the moral fabric of South Africa.
It comprises the Unit for Bioethics,
the Unit for Environmental Ethics and the Unit for Business Ethics. Commenting
on the significance of the funding, Director of the Centre for Applied
Ethics Prof Anton van Niekerk says: “In order to create a stable, coherent and
prosperous society in the present and future, we believe there is a need
to examine our values - those enduring beliefs that govern our actions. “The demand for this type of
reflection in a post-apartheid South Africa has sprung out of the
violence, moral indifference and ongoing criminality that continue to
plague our society. “Using philosophical tools, the
Centre reflects on the questions of right and wrong, good and bad that
emerge in practical situations in the medical, business and environmental
spheres. “This
process of deliberation is no simple task in a country where we have both
great diversity in cultural values as well as a convergence of values due
to the impact of modernisation“, says Prof van Niekerk. The Unit for
Environmental Ethics was awarded R1 million over four years from the
National Research Foundation for a project entitled Refining Sustainable
Development. Discussing
the research project, Unit for Environmental Ethics head Prof Johan
Hattingh says: “It focuses on one of the most used and perhaps most
over-used concepts in public policy worldwide today.” While the
concept of sustainable development was already in use at the Rio
Conference in 1992 and again at the World Summit in Johannesburg in 2002,
not much has materialised in the way of implementation,” he says. The Unit
will be investigating different models of implementing the concept in an
attempt to assist in more effective environmental decision-making and
policy. Following
the Unit for Environmental Ethics’s release of an opinion survey on
environmental decision-making in Cape Town, they will be offering a series
of courses and workshops for business, non-governmental organisations,
activists and government. The Unit for
Bioethics received two grants over the past year, totalling an amount of
about
R600 000. The one grant of R400 000 was awarded by the National
Research Foundation to Prof van Niekerk for a large research project on
“Bioethics and public medicine in the South African context, with
special reference to HIV/AIDS and new genetic technologies.” In addition
to this, the Medi-Clinic Corporation donated R200 000 over two years to
the Unit for Bioethics for research and increased interaction between the
Unit and the sphere of private medicine in South Africa. The company aims
to facilitate a greater level of co-operation between themselves and the
Unit. Discussing
the significance of these research funds, Unit for Bioethics head, Prof
van Niekerk says: “The focus of bioethics internationally and in South
Africa is increasingly shifting to ethical problems generated by public
medicine. A number of post-graduate students are working with me on some
of these problems, e.g. the issue of ethical review of research on human
subjects and the moral status of embryonic stem-cell research. Many of the
new genetic technologies are presenting themselves in a moral vacuum, and
we intend to help fill that vacuum”. Future plans
for the Unit for Bioethics include a comprehensive book on the ethical
problems related to HIV/AIDS in Africa. It is being edited by Prof Anton
van Niekerk and Prof Loretta Kopelman of East Carolina University in the
USA, and will by published by New Africa Books/David Phillip in the course
of 2005. Just about all the experts on this issue in South Africa and
abroad have made contributions to this volume. Prof. van Niekerk also has
a contract with Polity Press in Cambridge to write a comprehensive
introduction to biomedical ethics. He intends to do this during his
year-long sabbatical in 2005. Head of the
Tygerberg section of the Unit for Bioethics Dr Moodley is on the
verge of completing her doctoral dissertation on the problems of research
ethics committees in South Africa, and is continuing her initiative to
co-ordinate some of the work of these committees, by, amongst others,
publishing a bi-annual “SAREC Newsletter”. Each of these colleagues
address in the order of more than 20 conferences and meetings per year on
bioethical topics. |
" This process of deliberation is no simple task in a country where we have both great diversity in cultural values as well as a convergence of values due to the impact of modernisation... " |