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Ban On Cousin Marriage 'Ill Advised'

The law banning between cousins was 'ill-advised', according to Professor Hamish Spencer and Professor Diane Paul, a Research Associate at Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology.
Under the 31 state laws in US, the cousin s are completely banned or permitted only after the couple obtain genetic counselling or is beyond reproductive age or if one partner is sterile.
"Neither
the
scientific
nor
social
assumptions
behind
such
legislation
stand
up
to
close
scrutiny," said
Professor
Spencer.
Spencer
believes
that
risk
of
birth
defects
in
offspring
of
cousins
was
much
lower
than
anticipated.
He
used
the
2002
expert
review
of
studies
to
support
his
thesis.
"Women
over
the
age
of
40
have
a
similar
risk
of
having
children
with
birth
defects
and
no
one
is
suggesting
they
should
be
prevented
from
reproducing," said
Spencer.
“People
with
Huntington's
Disease
or
other
autosomal
dominant
disorders
have
a
50
per
cent
risk
of
transmitting
the
underlying
genes
to
offspring
and
they
are
not
barred
either,"
he
added.
Spencer declared that the legislation reflects outmoded prejudices about immigrants and the rural poor and relies on oversimplified views of heredity. There is no scientific grounding for it. Professor Spencer's views and study are a part of his open-access journal PloS. AGENCIES



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