Papers from conference held in Kyoto, Japan, on November 3-4, 2007.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Preface; Table of contents; Introduction; Part I. The politics of biotechnology; Tailoring biotechnologies: a manifesto; Local activism and the 'biotechnology project'; Part II. Opposition and participation; Tidy back yards or global justice? Types of rural GMO opposition in Austria and France and their wider implications; Democratising agri-biotechnology? European public participation in agbiotech assessment; Part III. Potentialities of reconstruction: critical reflections; First the peasant? Some reflections on modernity, technology and reconstruction.
Reconsidering agricultural modernisation: three dimensions of questioning and redesigning biotechnologies for international agricultural developmentEthicization of biotechnology research, politicisation of biotechnology ethics; Part IV. Quality agriculture and networks; European quality agriculture as an alternative bio-economy; Agriculture, food and design: new food networks for a distributed economy; Quality agriculture and the issue of technology: a short note on reconstruction; Communic(e)ating: communication and the social embedding of food; Part V. Potentialities of reconstruction: cases.
Risk, rights, and regulation: the politics of agricultural biotechnology in South AfricaBiotechnology policy: the myth and reality in Sub-Saharan Africa; Reconstructing agro-biotechnologies in Tanzania: smallholder farmers perspective; Part VI. Regulating technologies; Recoding life in common: a critical approach of post-nature; The wiki way: prefiguring change, practicing democracy; Tailoring rights regimes in biotechnology: introducing DRIPS next to TRIPS; About the authors; Index.
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The main subject of this publication is the co-creation of society and biotechnology. The authors do not treat society and biotechnology as separate domains, instead they consider technologies as socially constructed. The main focus of this publication is on agro-biotechnologies and the contributors present perspectives for reconstruction both from and in 'the North' and 'the South'. Reconstructing biotechnologies offers a range of critical social analyses confronting the actuality of biotechnology with the potentialities of its social reconstruction. In doing that, the book develops and merges literature from four different disciplines, namely (i) critical theory and its analyses of technology and power, (ii) political economy, critically assessing the interrelationship between economy, politics and technology, (iii) social constructivism, which holds that technology is the product of agency and knowledge systems, and (iv) the analysis of rural so.
Reconstructing biotechnologies.
9789086860623
Biotechnology-- Social aspects, Congresses.
Chemical engineering-- Social aspects, Congresses.