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Genomics governance: advancing justice, fairness and equity through the lens of the African communitarian ethic of Ubuntu

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Abstract

There is growing interest for a communitarian approach to the governance of genomics, and for such governance to be grounded in principles of justice, equity and solidarity. However, there is a near absence of conceptual studies on how communitarian-based principles, or values, may inform, support or guide the governance of genomics research. Given that solidarity is a key principle in Ubuntu, an African communitarian ethic and theory of justice, there is emerging interest about the extent to which Ubuntu could offer guidance for the governance of genomics research in Africa. To this effect, we undertook a conceptual analysis of Ubuntu with the goal of identifying principles that could inform equity-oriented governance of genomics research. Solidarity, reciprocity, open sharing, accountability, mutual trust, deliberative decision-making and inclusivity were identified as core principles that speak directly to the different macro-level ethical issues in genomics research in Africa such as: the exploitation of study populations and African researchers, equitable access and use of genomics data, benefit sharing, the possibility of genomics to widen global health inequities and the fair distribution of resources such as intellectual property and patents. We use the identified the principles to develop ethical guidance for genomics governance in Africa.

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Acknowledgements

Nchangwi S. Munung received a studentship from the “Stigma in African Genomics” study funded by the NIH (U01HG008226; PI: Jantina de Vries) to conduct this study. She is currently supported by the Sickle Africa Data Coordinating Centre (N.I.H. Grant No: U24HL135600). Jantina de Vries is currently supported by the IFGENERA Centre, which receives funding from the National Human Genome Research Institute of the NIH (U54HG009790). Bridget Pratt is supported by a University of Melbourne R Douglas Wright Research Fellowship and a Faculty of Medicine Dentistry and Health Sciences Bridging Fellowship.

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All authors contributed to the study conception and design. Analysis were performed by NSM. The first draft of the manuscript was written by NSM. All authors commented on drafts of the manuscript  and also read and approved the final manuscript.

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Correspondence to Nchangwi Syntia Munung.

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Munung, N.S., de Vries, J. & Pratt, B. Genomics governance: advancing justice, fairness and equity through the lens of the African communitarian ethic of Ubuntu. Med Health Care and Philos 24, 377–388 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11019-021-10012-9

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11019-021-10012-9

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