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Chapter 6 pertains to the politics of regulatory redemption. Success in iPS research led to Japan’s regulatory reforms in 2013, which transformed the image of Japan’s regulation of regenerative medicine: from a cautious means of protecting patients and scientific quality, Japan’s regulation metamorphosed into a saviour of public health, an enabler of scientific achievements and clinical firsts, and a booster of the national economy. Exploring the performance of the regulatory reforms through the so-called All Japan System (the policy that symbolizes and champions these redemptive ideals), the Chapter illustrates how the political aims and ideas embodied in the new regulation support certain industries and sanctify particular clinical targets to gain a global competitive edge, as well as pursuing scientific, economic and public health goals. Prompted by competitive desire, these regulatory policies were designed to strengthen financial budgets, national economic growth and international competition, misrecognizing the structural alterations of Japan’s science community and the role of patients and their families who would have to co-finance it and play a role as experimental subjects.
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