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Under the terms of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Australia has ratified, children have a right to know who their genetic parents are. As a result, we have a duty to establish these facts and to make this information available for children to access should they wish to know. Introducing mandatory DNA testing of newborns and their alleged genetic parents is one viable option to ensure that this information is available for children to access. Indeed, it may be the only viable option to address children's right to the fulfilment of Article 7 of the CRC. There are a number of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Under the terms of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, which Australia has ratified, children have a right to know who their genetic parents are. As a result, we have a duty to establish these facts and to make this information available for children to access should they wish to know. Introducing mandatory DNA testing of newborns and their alleged genetic parents is one viable option to ensure that this information is available for children to access. Indeed, it may be the only viable option to address children's right to the fulfilment of Article 7 of the CRC. There are a number of benefits to obtaining this benefit for children. For one, mandatory DNA testing could solve all disputed paternity cases and finalise them early in the lives of children, thus making life more financially secure for those children in the long term. This could reduce or eliminate the need for fathers to secretly carry out DNA tests in order to disestablish paternity. The large number of benefits gained from identifying genetic parents for children and the small possible risks that they may suffer when this information is withheld give us good reasons to support mandatory DNA testing.
Autorenporträt
Madeline Kilty has a Ph.D. in Philosophy. Other publications include: The Right to Know the Identities of Genetic Parents (2013) Australian Journal of Adoption, Deceitful Non-Disclosure in Misattributed Paternity (2010) The Australian Journal of Professional and Applied Ethics (AJPAE), Brain Gender and Transsexualism (2007) (AJPAE).