Browsing Harvard Law School by Keyword "AIDS"
Now showing items 1-5 of 5
-
Aiding AIDS: Hurdling the Obstacles to the Development of an Effective AIDS Vaccine
(2002)This paper explores the various impediments to the development of a safe and effective AIDS vaccine, and offers suggestions to help overcome these obstacles. I begin by discussing the FDA approval process and the current ... -
AIDS HOME TEST KITS
(1994)Given the emphasis on private, confidential and voluntary testing, the idea of an AIDS home test kit was inevitable. What could be more private, confidential and voluntary (and profitable) than buying a test kit at a drug ... -
THE INADEQUATE RESPONSE OF THE FDA TO THE CRISIS OF AIDS IN THE BLOOD SUPPLY
(1995)The response of the blood industry and the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to the problem of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) in the nation's blood supply has been called "inadequate and abysmal," "unnecessarily ... -
PhRMA-Dynasty: How to Provide Antiretroviral Access to Developing Nations while Aligning Research Incentives for Pharmaceutical Companies in the Form of Profit and Intellectual Property Protection
(2006)The AIDS revolution has led to shockingly high rates of mortality in the developing world. Governments of developing and developed nations alike are on high alert, attempting to design appropriate strategies to combat the ... -
Shocking the Conscience of the World: International Norms and the Access to AIDS Treatment in South Africa
(2003)This paper examines the emergence and institutionalization of a new international norm supporting greater access to lifesaving drugs in developing countries, particularly for HIV/AIDS drugs in South Africa. In order to ...