Publication | Open Access
<i>A Lab of Their Own</i>: Genomic sovereignty as postcolonial science policy
143
Citations
35
References
2009
Year
ColonialismNationalismGenomicsGenetic MedicineGlobal StudiesSocial SciencesNationalist ProjectScientific IntegrityPostcolonial CountriesPostcolonial Science PolicyGeopoliticsGlobal GovernanceBiopoliticsInternational RelationsScience PolicyGenomic SovereigntyPostcolonial StudiesWorld PoliticsGlobalizationPolitical GeographyPolitical PluralismGlobal PoliticsScience And Technology StudiesAnthropologyArtsPolitical ScienceInternational Institutions
Abstract This paper analyzes the emergence of ‘genomic sovereignty’ policies as a newly popular way for postcolonial countries to frame their investment in genomics. It identifies three strands in the genealogy of this policy arena—the International Haplotype Mapping Project as a model and foil for postcolonial genomics; an emerging public health genomics field which stands in contrast to Western pursuits of personalized medicine; and North American drug companies increased focus on ethnic drug markets. I conceptualize postcolonial genomics as a nationalist project with contradictory tendencies—unifying and differentiating a diverse body politic, cultivating national scientific and commercial autonomy and dependence upon global knowledge networks and foreign capital. It argues that the ‘strategic calibration’ of socio-political versus biological taxonomies in postcolonial genomics creates two primary challenges for this arena, which I refer to heuristically as dilemmas of mapping and marketing.
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