ABSTRACT

The second decade of the twenty-first century has witnessed a surging interest in personalized medicine with the concomitant promise to enable more precise diagnosis and treatment of disease and illness, based upon an individual’s unique genetic makeup.

In this book, my goal is to contribute to a growing body of literature on personalized medicine by tracing and analyzing how this field has blossomed in Asia. In so doing, I aim to illustrate how various social and economic forces shape the co-production of science and social order in global contexts. This book shows that there are inextricable transnational linkages between developing and developed countries and also provides a theoretically guided and empirically grounded understanding of the formation and usage of particular racial and ethnic human taxonomies in local, national and transnational settings.

The Open Access version of this book, available at https://www.taylorfrancis.com/doi/view/10.4324/9781315537177  has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license.

chapter 1|24 pages

Introduction

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chapter 2|22 pages

Regionalism and the study of human genetic variation in a transnational context

Asianism, nationalism, and the racialization of ethnicity
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chapter 3|27 pages

Capitalizing on being “othered”

Precision medicine and race in the context of a globalized pharmaceutical industry
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chapter 4|24 pages

Managing otherness

Genomics and public health policy in Singapore
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chapter 5|22 pages

Cancer genomics in clinics

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chapter 7|24 pages

Conclusion

Personalized medicine and population-based genetic/genomic studies
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