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    Asian Biotech ? Ethics and Communities of Fate: Ethics and Communities of Fate

    Asian Biotech ? Ethics and Communities of Fate by Ong, Aihwa; Chen, Nancy N.;

    Ethics and Communities of Fate

    Series: Experimental Futures;

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    58 707 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher MD ? Duke University Press
    • Date of Publication 5 November 2010
    • Number of Volumes Cloth over boards

    • ISBN 9780822347934
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages277 pages
    • Size 250x150x15 mm
    • Weight 621 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 3 illustrations
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    Short description:

    Ethnographic analyses of emerging bioscientific enterprises in Asia, including genetically modified foods in China, clinical trials in India, and stem-cell research in Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan.

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    Long description:

    Providing the first overview of Asia’s emerging biosciences landscape, this timely and important collection brings together ethnographic case studies on biotech endeavors such as genetically modified foods in China, clinical trials in India, blood collection in Singapore and China, and stem-cell research in Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan. While biotech policies and projects vary by country, the contributors identify a significant trend toward state entrepreneurialism in biotechnology, and they highlight the ways that political thinking and ethical reasoning are converging around the biosciences. As ascendant nations in a region of postcolonial emergence, with an “uncanny surplus” in population and pandemics, Asian countries treat their populations as sources of opportunity and risk. Biotech enterprises are allied to efforts to overcome past humiliations and restore national identity and political ambition, and they are legitimized as solutions to national anxieties about food supplies, diseases, epidemics, and unknown biological crises in the future. Biotechnological responses to perceived risks stir deep feelings about shared fate, and they crystallize new ethical configurations, often re-inscribing traditional beliefs about ethnicity, nation, and race. As many of the essays in this collection illustrate, state involvement in biotech initiatives is driving the emergence of “biosovereignty,” an increasing pressure for state control over biological resources, commercial health products, corporate behavior, and genetic based-identities. Asian Biotech offers much-needed analysis of the interplay among biotechnologies, economic growth, biosecurity, and ethical practices in Asia.

    Contributors
    Vincanne Adams
    Nancy N. Chen
    Stefan Ecks
    Kathleen Erwin
    Phuoc V. Le
    Jennifer Liu
    Aihwa Ong
    Margaret Sleeboom-Faulkner
    Kaushik Sunder Rajan
    Wen-Ching Sung
    Charis Thompson
    Ara Wilson



    Asian Biotech is a thoughtful examination of Asia’s biotechnology development. The call to understand this realm in terms of situated ethics and communities of fate is persuasive and invites the analysis of more cases to test the robustness of these concepts.” - Wen-Hua Kuo, The China Quarterly

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