Çï¿ûÊÓƵ

Henry T. Greely

Stanford University

Henry T. (Hank) Greely specializes in the ethical, legal, and social implications of new biomedical technologies, particularly those related to genetics, assisted reproduction, neuroscience, or stem cell research. He is a founder and past president of the International Neuroethics Society; former chair of the Ethical, Legal, and Social Issues Committee of the Earth BioGenome Project; and chair of California’s Human Stem Cell Research Advisory Committee. He served as a member of the Multi-Council Working Group of the NIH’s BRAIN Initiative, whose Neuroethics Working Group he co-chaired, from 2016 through 2022; a member of the Committee on Science, Technology, and Law of the National Academies from 2013-2019; Neuroscience Forum of the Institute of Medicine from 2012-2019; as a member of the Advisory Council of the NIH’s National Institute for General Medical Sciences from 2013-2016; and from 2007-2010 as a co-director of the Law and Neuroscience Project, funded by the MacArthur Foundation.

Greely chairs the steering committee for the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics and directs the law school’s Center for Law and the Biosciences. He was elected a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2007 and received Stanford University’s Richard W. Lyman Award in 2013, and the Stanford Prize in Population Genetics and Society in 2017. He published The End of Sex and the Future of Human Reproduction in 2016. His second book, CRISPR People: The Science and Ethics of Editing Humans, was published in 2021.