ABSTRACT

New genetic technologies cut across a range of public regulatory domains and private lifeworlds, often appearing to generate an institutional void in response to the complex challenges they pose. As a result, a number of new social formations are being developed to legitimate public engagement and avoid the perceived democratic deficit that may result. Papers in this volume discuss a variety of these manifestations in a global context, including:

  • genetic data banks
  • committees of inquiry
  • non-governmental organisations (NGOs)
  • national research laboratories.

These institutions, across both health and agriculture, are explored in such diverse locations as Amazonia, China, Finland, Israel, the UK and the USA. This volume exhibits a clear thematic coherence around the impact of the new genetics and their associated technologies on new social formations, and the case studies included have a significant international focus, showing a balance between theoretical and empirical approaches in this rapidly changing field.

This innovative new volume will be of interest to postgraduates and professionals in the fields of sociology, social anthropology, science and technology studies, and environmental studies.

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction: New genetics, new social formations

ByPETER GLASNER, PAUL ATKINSON
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chapter 4|20 pages

Public biotechnology inquiries: from rationality to reflexivity

ByTEE ROGERS-HAYDEN AND MAVIS JONES
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chapter 6|20 pages

The social construction of the biotech industry

ByKEAN BIRCH
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chapter 7|24 pages

Biopiracy and the bioeconomy

ByPAUL OLDHAM
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chapter 12|27 pages

Science, media and society: The framing of bioethical debates around embryonic stem cell research between 2000 and 2005

ByJENNY KITZINGER, CLARE WILLIAMS, LESLEY HENDERSON
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chapter 14|26 pages

Survival of the gene? 21st-century visions from genomics, proteomics and the new biology

ByRUTH MCNALLY, PETER GLASNER
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