ABSTRACT

This book addresses the interconnections and tensions between technological development, the social benefits and risks of new technology, and the changing political economy of a global world system as they apply to the emerging field of nanotechnologies. The basic premise, developed throughout the volume, is that nanotechnologies have an undertheorized and often invisible social life that begins with their constructed origins and propels them around the globe, across multiple localities, institutions and collaborations, through diverse industries, research labs, and government agencies and into the public sphere. The volume situates nano innovation and development as a modernist science and technology project in a tense and unstable relationship with a fractured, postmodern social world. The book is unique in incorporating and integrating studies of innovation systems along with a focus on the risks and consequences of a globally significant set of emerging technologies. It does this by examining the social and political conditions of their creation, production, emergence, and reception.

chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction

The Social Scientific View of Nanotechnologies

part I|49 pages

Constructing the Field of Nanotechnology

chapter 2|18 pages

Science That Pays for Itself

Nanotechnology and the Discourse of Science Policy Reform

part II|99 pages

Controlling the Field

chapter 6|23 pages

Working for Next to Nothing

Labor in the Global Nanoscientific Community

chapter 7|23 pages

Nanotechnology as Industrial Policy

China and the United States

chapter 8|32 pages

The Chinese Century?

China's Move Towards Indigenous Innovation: Some Policy Implications

part III|98 pages

Contesting the Field

chapter 9|26 pages

Nanotechnologies and Upstream Public Engagement

Dilemmas, Debates and Prospects?

chapter 10|28 pages

Different Uses, Different Responses

Exploring Emergent Cultural Values Through Public Deliberation

chapter 11|18 pages

News Media Frame Novel Technologies in a Familiar Way

Nanotechnology, Applications, and Progress

chapter 12|24 pages

Public Responses to Nanotechnology

Risks to the Social Fabric?