ABSTRACT

Public institutions, academic researchers and financial analysts among others hail nanotechnologies as one of the most promising sectors of social and economic development. Calculations predict that it will become a trillion euro industry by 2015 and that it will bring about economic change of at least the same magnitude as the industrial revolution. Nanotechnology is recent, younger by some thirty years than biotechnology, but it appears at a point in time in human history where there is a convergence between the globalization of access to information and increasing awareness of the importance of sustainable development. Nanotechnology and Sustainable Development explores the ways in which this convergence leads to a change in the management of innovation – and ultimately a reshaping of technological democracy. The scope of the study is global, with a particular focus on Europe and the United States, utilizing several case studies of stakeholders including entrepreneurs, commentators, end users, scientists, and policy makers.

part I|17 pages

Nano, the Next Dimension of Sustainable Development

chapter 1|9 pages

Background and Road Map

chapter 2|6 pages

General Philosophy of the Book

part II|31 pages

Indicators of Nanotechnology Entrepreneurship

chapter 3|2 pages

Context and Definitions

chapter 4|11 pages

R&D Architecture

chapter 5|3 pages

Research Centers and Infrastructure

chapter 6|7 pages

Nanorelated Patent Activities

chapter 7|5 pages

Nanoproducts Reaching the Market

chapter 8|1 pages

Summary

part III|22 pages

Nanodevelopment and Regulatory Practices

chapter 9|5 pages

Areas of Development

chapter 10|7 pages

Initial Positive Regulation

chapter 11|2 pages

Initial Restrictive Regulation

part IV|27 pages

Innovative Practices and Nanotechnology Institutional Emergence

chapter 14|3 pages

Introducing the Case of the ETC Group

chapter 15|3 pages

Theoretical Background

chapter 16|2 pages

Methodology

chapter 17|14 pages

Circumstances and Practices

chapter 18|3 pages

Findings

part V|21 pages

New Institutionalization Processes

chapter 21|5 pages

A Case Study of Public Engagement

chapter 22|5 pages

Interpretation and Findings

part VI|26 pages

Towards A New Form of Technological Democracy

chapter 24|10 pages

Governance and Norm

chapter 25|3 pages

Interpreting Change

chapter 26|5 pages

Conclusion