ABSTRACT

Nanotechnology - technology at the molecular level - is held out by many as the Holy Grail for creating a trillion dollar economy and solving problems from curing cancer to reprocessing waste into products and building superfast computers. Yet, as with GMOs, many view nanotech as a high risk genie in a bottle that once uncorked has the potential to cause unpredictable, perhaps irreversible, environmental and public health disasters. With the race to bring products to market, there is pressing need to take stock of the situation and to have a full public debate about this new technological frontier. Including contributions by renowned figures such as Roland Clift, K. Eric Drexler and Arpad Pusztai, this is the first global overview of the state of nanotech and society in Europe, the USA, Japan and Canada, examining the ethics, the environmental and public health risks, and the governance and regulation of this most promising, and potentially most dangerous, of all technologies.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

The Challenge of Nanotechnologies

part 1|46 pages

Introducing Nanotechnology

chapter 2|12 pages

Nanotechnology

From ‘Wow' to ‘Yuck’?

chapter 3|10 pages

Nanotechnology

From Feynman to Funding

chapter 5|14 pages

Nanotechnoscience and Complex Systems

The Case for Nanology

part 2|61 pages

Regional Developments

part 3|61 pages

Benefits and Risks

chapter 10|9 pages

From Biotechnology To Nanotechnology

What Can We Learn From Earlier Technologies?

chapter 13|13 pages

Nanotechnology and Nanoparticle Toxicity

A Case for Precaution

chapter 14|13 pages

The Future of Nanotechnology in Food Science and Nutrition

Can Science Predict its Safety?

part 4|41 pages

Ethics and Public Understanding

chapter 15|13 pages

The Global Ethics of Nanotechnology

chapter 16|17 pages

Going Public

Risk, Trust and Public Understandings of Nanotechnology

part 6|11 pages

Conclusion