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LIRA@BC Law

Abstract

Since the 1980s, successive White House Administrations have shaped federal policy on genetically modified food and agriculture to (1) be product-based, (2) presume low risk from genetic modification, and (3) review GM products under existing federal standards. For two decades, the FDA, USDA, and EPA have erected a regulatory framework for GM products based on these three principles. This Article reviews the history and structure of this framework and the challenges that it has faced as more GM products have entered the market. The Article concludes that the three basic principles of federal GM policy may have to be reconsidered and redirected as genetic modification continues to grow as a force in world commerce.

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File nameDate UploadedVisibilityFile size
44_3_733.pdf
6 Sep 2022
Public
2.86 MB

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Metadata

  • Subject
    • Agriculture Law

    • Food and Drug Law

  • Journal title
    • Boston College Law Review

  • Volume
    • 44

  • Issue
    • 3

  • Pagination
    • 733

  • Date submitted

    6 September 2022