This book investigates how ethics generally precedes legal regulation,
and looks at how changes in codes of ethics represent an unparalleled
window into the research, innovation, and emerging technologies they
seek to regulate. It provides case studies from the fields of
engineering, science, medicine and social science showing how
professional codes of ethics often predate regulation and help shape the
ethical use of emerging technologies and professional practice. Changes
in professional ethics are the crystallization of ongoing conversation
in scientific and professional fields about how justice, privacy, safety
and human rights should be realized in practice where the law is
currently silent. This book is a significant addition to this area of
practical and professional ethics and is of particular interest to
practitioners, scholars, and students interested in the areas of
practical and applied ethics.