![]() SDG 16: Policies to address the gender dimension of Illicit Financial Flowsīy Arthur Muliro Wapakala, Society for International Development (SID).SDG 15: The 30-year search for biodiversity gold: history repeats itself?.SDG 14: Sustainable fishery or Blue Economy?.SDG 13: Climate Justice – How climate change battles are increasingly being fought, and won, in court.SDG 12: Curbing the consumption of ultra-processed foods and beverages critical to achieving SDG 12.SDG 11: To ensure sustainable waste services, we must value waste workers and make sure they are in decent jobs.SDG 10: Invoking extraterritorial human rights obligations to confront extreme inequalities between countries.SDG 9: Alternatives to PPPs – growing instances of de-privatization.SDG 8: What policies are needed to achieve Goal 8?.SDG 7: Power for the people? The chimera of pro-poor energy solutions.SDG 5: Women, macroeconomic policies and the SDGs.SDG 4: The quest for public funding for education and SDG 4.SDG 3: The need to strengthen public funding for the WHO.SDG 2: Approaching SDG 2 through the Right to Food and Nutrition.SDG 1: Mobilize the financial means for social protection systems for all.5 – Quest for sustainable peace and development under militarized security approaches.Box – The National Care System in Uruguay.4 – Care systems and SDGs: reclaiming policies for life sustainability.Box – Machines (algorithms) are already deciding our future.Box – The food-health-environment nexus.2 – Policies that strengthen the nexus between food, health, ecology, livelihoods and identities.Box – De-financialization requires global economic governance reform.1 – The increasing concentration of wealth and economic power as an obstacle to sustainable development – and what to do about it.Box – How to leave no one behind in statistics?.Box – Claim of ‘leave no one behind’ must include indigenous peoples.Alternative national reports throw light on inequalities.Box – The world needs to revamp international tax cooperation.Redefining policies for sustainable development.An NIH spokesperson recently told Science a proposal to rethink the block in 2016 is "still under consideration. Such experiments are not condoned in the U.S., where the National Institutes of Health has stopped short of a ban by blocking funding for chimera experiments. Typically they are very small, and they take too long to develop," he said. "I always made the case that it doesn't make sense to use a primate for that. Speaking to MIT Technology Review, Ross argued using monkeys to grow human organs isn't the best approach, either. The human cells "contributed very little" to the embryo's growth at one human cell for every 100,000 pig, Pablo Ross, a veterinary researcher at the University of California, Davis, who worked on the 2017 study told El Pais. The experiments come after Izpisúa's lab unsuccessfully carried out the world's first experiment on human and pig chimeras in 2017. Researchers working in China are making human-monkey hybrids. Núñez said the researchers plan to experiment with human cells and rodent and pig cells, as well as with non-human primates.Ī stock image of Rhesus macaque monkeys. The researchers did not release further details to the newspaper as they said they plan to publish their findings in a scientific journal.īiologist Estrella Núñez of Spain's Murcia Catholic University who worked on the project told El Pais: "The results are very promising." The work, led by scientist Juan CarlosIzpisúa of the Salk Institute, California and researchers at Murcia Catholic University (UCAM), was carried out in China to side-step the potential legal issues, according to El Pais. However, the would-be chimera is not alive as researchers stopped the process, El Pais reported. ![]() ![]() ![]() A chimera is an organism which contains two different sets of DNA. If successful, scientists could create chimeras which contain organs made of human cells. The approach involves the embryo of a species which is a few days old, and human embryonic stem cells, brought together in a way which would enable them to grow harmoniously, according to MIT Technology Review. Stem cells are special because they can become another type of cell in the body, such as a nerve of muscle cell. The team hope the technique will bring animals used to grow human organs for transplantation a step closer, Spain's El Pais newspaper reported.Īn international team of scientists working in China genetically modified the embryos of monkeys by turning off the genes which create organs, and then inserted human stem cells. Scientists in China have reportedly created part human, part monkey chimera embryos for the first time.
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