The Ethics of Biosurveillance
S.K. Devitt, P.W.J. Baxter, G. Hamilton

TL;DR
This paper proposes an ethical framework for biosurveillance in agriculture, balancing food security benefits with individual privacy rights through stakeholder-inclusive, responsible innovation processes.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive ethical framework for biosurveillance that emphasizes stakeholder participation, data control, and justified surveillance methods to foster trust and cooperation.
Findings
Ethical framework enhances stakeholder trust and participation.
Balancing privacy and security improves data quality.
Framework supports sustainable, responsible biosurveillance practices.
Abstract
Governments must keep agricultural systems free of pests that threaten agricultural production and international trade. Biosecurity surveillance already makes use of a wide range of technologies, such as insect traps and lures, geographic information systems, and diagnostic biochemical tests. The rise of cheap and usable surveillance technologies such as remotely piloted aircraft systems (RPAS) presents value conflicts not addressed in international biosurveillance guidelines. The costs of keeping agriculture pest-free include privacy violations and reduced autonomy for farmers. We argue that physical and digital privacy in the age of ubiquitous aerial and ground surveillance is a natural right to allow people to function freely on their land. Surveillance methods must be co-created and justified through using ethically defensible processes such as discourse theory, value-centred design…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetically Modified Organisms Research · Food Supply Chain Traceability
