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332 Pages·2010·1.01 MB·English
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P R O O F (cid:4) (cid:4) (cid:96) (cid:37)(cid:55)(cid:45)(cid:37)(cid:50)(cid:4)(cid:38)(cid:45)(cid:51)(cid:56)(cid:41)(cid:39)(cid:44) (cid:96) to prevent piracy and protect this , intellectual property please do not circulate or . forward this pdf delete it when you . are done with it P R O O F (cid:41)(cid:60)(cid:52)(cid:41)(cid:54)(cid:45)(cid:49)(cid:41)(cid:50)(cid:56)(cid:37)(cid:48)(cid:4)(cid:42)(cid:57)(cid:56)(cid:57)(cid:54)(cid:41)(cid:55) (cid:56)(cid:41)(cid:39)(cid:44)(cid:50)(cid:51)(cid:48)(cid:51)(cid:43)(cid:45)(cid:39)(cid:37)(cid:48)(cid:4)(cid:48)(cid:45)(cid:58)(cid:41)(cid:55)(cid:16)(cid:4)(cid:55)(cid:39)(cid:45)(cid:41)(cid:50)(cid:56)(cid:45)(cid:42)(cid:45)(cid:39)(cid:4)(cid:37)(cid:54)(cid:56)(cid:55)(cid:16)(cid:4)(cid:4) (cid:37)(cid:50)(cid:56)(cid:44)(cid:54)(cid:51)(cid:52)(cid:51)(cid:48)(cid:51)(cid:43)(cid:45)(cid:39)(cid:37)(cid:48)(cid:4)(cid:58)(cid:51)(cid:45)(cid:39)(cid:41)(cid:55) A series edited by Michael M. J. Fischer and Joseph Dumit P R O O F Edited by Aihwa Ong and Nancy N. Chen (cid:4) (cid:4) (cid:96) (cid:37) (cid:55) (cid:45) (cid:37) (cid:50) (cid:4)(cid:38) (cid:45) (cid:51) (cid:56) (cid:41) (cid:39) (cid:44) (cid:96) (cid:41)(cid:56)(cid:44)(cid:45)(cid:39)(cid:55)(cid:4)(cid:37)(cid:50)(cid:40)(cid:4)(cid:39)(cid:51)(cid:49)(cid:49)(cid:57)(cid:50)(cid:45)(cid:56)(cid:45)(cid:41)(cid:55)(cid:4)(cid:51)(cid:42)(cid:4)(cid:42)(cid:37)(cid:56)(cid:41) | Duke University Press | Durham and London | 2010 | P R O O F ∫ 2010 Duke University Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper $ Designed by Heather Hensley Typeset in Chaparral Pro by Keystone Typesetting, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data appear on the last printed page of this book. An earlier version of chapter 1, by Kaushik Sunder Rajan, was published as ‘‘Experimental Values: Indian Clinical Trials and Surplus Health,’’ New Left Review 45 (2007): 67–88. A different version of chapter 8, by Margaret Sleeboom-Faulkner, was published as ‘‘Debates on Human Embryonic Cells in Japan: Minority Voices and Their Political Amplifiers,’’ Science as Culture 17, no. 1 (March 2008): 85–97. P R O O F Contents Acknowledgments 000 Introduction: An Analytics of Ethics and Biotechnology in Global Space AIHWA ONG 000 PART I EXCESS AND OPPORTUNITY The Experimental Machinery of Global Clinical Trials: Case Studies from India KAUSHIK SUNDER RAJAN 000 Feeding the Nation: Chinese Biotechnology and Genetically Modified Foods NANCY N. CHEN 000 PART II BIOVENTURES Asian Regeneration? Nationalism and Internationalism in Stem Cell Research in South Korea and Singapore CHARIS THOMPSON 000 Medical Tourism in Thailand ARA WILSON 000 Near-Liberalism: Global Corporate Citizenship and Pharmaceutical Marketing in India STEFAN ECKS 000 PART III COMMUNITIES OF FATE Governing through Blood: Biology, Donation, and Exchange in Urban China VINCANNE ADAMS, KATHLEEN ERWIN, AND PHOUC V. LE 000 P R O O F Lifelines: The Ethics of Blood Banking for Family and Beyond AIHWA ONG 000 Embryo Controversies and Governing Stem Cell Research in Japan: How to Regulate Regenerative Futures MARGARET SLEEBOOM-FAULKNER 000 PART IV BIOSOVEREIGNTY: MAPPINGS OF CHINESENESS Making Taiwanese (Stem Cells): Identity, Genetics, and Hybridity JENNIFER A. LIU 000 Chinese dna: Genomics and Bionation WEN-CHING SUNG 000 Afterword NANCY N. CHEN 000 Bibliography 000 Contributors 000 Index 000 P R O O F Acknowledgments The University of California Pacific Rim Research Program pro- vided the funding for our workshop ‘‘Asian Biotech’’ in Honolulu in April 2006. The University of Hawaii John A. Burns School of Medi- cine generously provided conference facilities for the meeting, and we thank Lesley Sharp for her role as a discussant. We are grateful to the workshop participants for their contribu- tions, which make up this collection. Janelle Lamoreaux provided skill- ful assistance in preparing the final manuscript. Maura High’s excellent copyediting is deeply appreciated. Finally, we thank the Abigail Rey- nolds Hodgen Publication Fund for defraying the costs involved in getting this book ready for publication. P R O O F P R O O F INTRODUCTION AIHWA ONG An Analytics of Biotechnology and Ethics at Multiple Scales The dispersal of genetic science across the world raises questions about the interactions of biotechnologies and bioethics in diverse global loca- tions. Yet the tendency has been to think in terms of general rules for governing the proliferation of scientific and commercial uses of biolog- ical resources. For instance, at the 2008 meeting of the World Eco- nomic Forum in Davos, a panel proposing ‘‘Rules for the Genomic Age’’ issued this statement: Genetic data about specific populations may soon be in the hands of a wide variety of interested players from pharmaceutical firms to insurance companies for scientifically and commercially valid rea- sons. How should access to, and the application of, this information be managed to both promote collaborative innovation and address societal concerns?’’∞ It is perhaps not surprising that meetings dominated by pharmaceuti- cal interests do not list the nation-state as an interested player, nor is there any mention of resurgent nationalism and ethical debates in non- Western contexts as influences in the uses and effects of the biosci- ences. Even academic research has struggled to keep abreast of recent events that highlight the complex intersections of the life sciences and ethical dilemmas in Asia: 1. At the turn of the new century Singapore launched Biopolis, a biomedical research hub that seeks to combine researchers from the public and private sectors. The government boasted about the P R O O F 2 AIHWA ONG ‘‘state-of-the-art infrastructure including shared resources and services catering to the full spectrum of r & d activities and graduate training.’’ Stunning buildings with names like Genome, Matrix, Nanos, Centros, Helios, Proteos, Neuros, and Immunos house a spectrum of research institutes, many lead by ‘‘world- class’’ (a favorite term) scientists from around the world. The complex has overcome initial global skepticism to win accolades such as ‘‘a high-tech heaven’’ and ‘‘Asia’s biotech tiger,’’ and to advertise itself in Science as ‘‘the Biopolis of Asia.’’≤ 2. Shortly after scientists on the Human Genome Project released a rough draft of their report in 2000, China was the only devel- oping nation to contribute to ongoing sequencing by an inter- national consortium of scientists and laboratories. The Beijing Genomics Institute followed in 2002 with an entire mapping of a hybrid rice genome. A sequencing machine stands on display in the Museum of History in Beijing.≥ 3. In early 2004, a scandal roiled the stem cells world, when the sensational claim of the South Korean scientist Dr. Hwang Woo- Suk, to be the first to clone a human embryo, was exposed as fraudulent. The research reported in two papers published by Dr. Hwang’s team in Science was later revealed as fabricated. Not only was this scandal a major blow to South Korean science, it also raised ethical questions about lab practices surrounding the do- nation of human eggs.∂ The event cast an international spotlight on South Korea’s quest to build a ‘‘world stem cell hub with new labs in California’’ and to influence global perception of ‘‘different ethical norms’’ for biomedical research in Asian sites.∑ 4. More recently, in 2007, stem cell research made a major advance in Asia. In Japan, Shinya Yamanaka successfully reprogrammed skin cells to produce stem cells, thereby perhaps bypassing the need to use human embryos in research. Although an American team also made a similar discovery at the University of Wiscon- sin, Yamanaka has single-handedly put Japan on the cutting edge of scientific research by developing an alternative to embryo- based research in Asian biomedical sciences.∏ This book responds to the urgent need for examining the deploy- ment of biotechnologies in economic growth, biosecurity, and ethi-

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Introduction: An Analytics of Ethics and Biotechnology in Global Space .. man, reinforced by George Orwell's 1984 and Aldous Huxley's Brave.
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