Results for 'biocapitalism'

33 found
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  1.  30
    Theorizing the Bioeconomy: Biovalue, Biocapital, Bioeconomics or... What?David Tyfield & Kean Birch - 2013 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 38 (3):299-327.
    In the policy discourses of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and European Commission, modern biotechnology and the life sciences are represented as an emerging “bioeconomy” in which the latent value underpinning biological materials and products offers the opportunity for sustainable economic growth. This articulation of modern biotechnology and economic development is an emerging scholarly field producing numerous “bio-concepts.” Over the last decade or so, there have been a number of attempts to theorize this relationship between biotechnologies and their (...)
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  2.  13
    The Promissory Future(s) of Education: Rethinking scientific literacy in the era of biocapitalism.Clayton Pierce - 2012 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 44 (7):721-745.
    This article investigates the biopolitical dimensions that have grown out of the union between biocapitalism and current science education reform in the US. Drawing on science and technology study theorists, I utilize the analytics of promissory valuation and salvationary discourses to understand how scientific literacy in the neo‐Sputnik era has deeply involved educational life in biocapitalist circuits of exchange and production. I lay out this emerging terrain of ‘futuricity’ through a biopolitical analysis of the National Academies highly influential policy (...)
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  3.  20
    Biocapital: The Constitution of Postgenomic Life. Kaushik Sunder Rajan. Pp. 434. (Duke University Press, Durham and London, 2006.) £14.99, ISBN 0-8223-3720-7, paperback. [REVIEW]Cameron Adams - 2008 - Journal of Biosocial Science 40 (6):940-941.
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  4.  10
    Hybrid UCB banks in China – public storage as ethical biocapital.Suli Sui & Margaret Sleeboom-Faulkner - 2019 - New Genetics and Society 38 (1):60-79.
    In China, under the heading of “private-for-public” banking, hybrid UCB banking has been politically supported by the government and is based on regulation developed since the 1990s. Although hybrid UCB banking was regarded as an “ethical” alternative to private UCB banking due to its accessibility to “the people”, this study, based on archival research and interviews with bankers, medical professionals, scientists and pregnant women contends that the practice of this ideal needs to be closely scrutinized. Analysing UCB bank networks in (...)
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  5.  16
    Kaushik Sunder Rajan. Biocapital: The Constitution of Postgenomic Life. xi + 343 pp., bibl., index. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2006. $84.95 ; $23.95. [REVIEW]Joseph November - 2008 - Isis 99 (1):225-227.
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  6.  6
    Education in the Age of Biocapitalism: Optimizing educational life for a flat world.Gregory N. Bourassa - 2015 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 47 (5):532-536.
  7.  12
    Pierce, C., Education in the Age of Biocapitalism: Optimizing educational life for a flat world New York, Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.Gregory N. Bourassa - 2015 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 47 (5):1-5.
  8.  13
    Bad Blood and Unsettled Law: Are Healing and Justice Even Possible when Biocapitalism Prevails?Stephen Pemberton - 2019 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 62 (3):576-590.
    Catastrophically bad decisions were an all-too-frequent occurrence when it came to managing blood for therapeutic purposes in the first decade of the AIDS epidemic. The victims of those bad decisions were, first and foremost, the persons who received HIV-contaminated blood via their medical treatments. During the 1980s, at least 20,000 patients in the United States contracted HIV infections via "tainted" blood treatments. More than half of the nation's 16,000 hemophilia patients were among that number. Unlike the roughly 12,000 Americans who (...)
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  9.  27
    Bioethics at stake: The challenge of corporate science and biocapitalism.María José Guerra - 2009 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 2 (1):52-58.
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  10.  13
    Response: Bioethics at Stake: The Challenge of Corporate Science and Biocapitalism.María José Guerra - 2009 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 2 (1):52 - 58.
  11.  15
    The Afterlife of Reproductive Slavery: Biocapitalism and Black Feminism’s Philosophy of History.Gina Maranto - 2020 - The New Bioethics 26 (4):372-374.
    Since their inception, reproductive technologies have been the subject of ethical examination, while also being analyzed in terms of their economic, sociopolitical, cultural, feminist, and religiou...
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  12.  43
    Review of Kaushik Sunder Rajan, Biocapital: The Constitution of Postgenomic Life. [REVIEW]Kean Birch - 2007 - American Journal of Bioethics 7 (6):67-69.
  13.  11
    A Review of “Education in the Age of Biocapitalism: Optimizing Educational Life for a Flat World”. [REVIEW]Graham B. Slater - 2014 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 50 (6):598-604.
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  14.  99
    The New Biopolitics.Jiangxia Yu & Jingwei Liu - 2009 - Journal of Academic Ethics 7 (4):287-296.
    The biotech revolution profoundly changes and reconstructs the Foucaultian concept of biopolitics from different dimensions. It declares the coming of the Age of Biocapitalism, which opens a new pattern of modern power allocation of life governance and shows people two prospects simultaneously: utopian hopes and dystopian desperation. Biocapitalism has not only produced ethical degeneration and cultural shock, but more importantly, has opened new areas for political hegemony and economic aggression through the reconstruction of biopolitics, and the enhancement of (...)
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  15.  20
    Why and How Bioethics Must Turn toward Justice: A Modest Proposal.Jenny Reardon - 2020 - Hastings Center Report 50 (S1):70-76.
    In this essay, I argue that to create a genomics that offers more gifts than weights, central attention must be paid to questions of justice. This will require expanding bioethical imaginations so that they grasp and can respond to questions of structural inequity. It will necessitate building novel coalitions and collaborations that turn the attention of bioethical governance away from narrow individual questions such as, “Do I consent?” and toward the broader collective question, is this just? What kind of lives (...)
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  16.  46
    The Alienation of Body Tissue and the Biopolitics of Immortalized Cell Lines.Margaret Lock - 2001 - Body and Society 7 (2-3):63-91.
    The alienation of body parts and their transformation into commodities raises questions about ownership, property rights, and about possible violation of the moral order. This article focuses on the `social life' of objects, including body parts, and the multiple meanings attached to them that are made visible in systems of exchange. The transformation of DNA obtained in blood samples into immortalized cell lines for use in the Human Genome Diversity Project is introduced as an illustration of contested commodification. The meanings (...)
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  17.  15
    Twenty theses on contemporary capitalism.Andrea Fumagalli - 2011 - Angelaki 16 (3):7-17.
    The aim of this article is twofold. On the one hand, it is an attempt at systematizing a series of reflections elaborated by a number of studies appeared in the last decade. This research comes from scholars in different disciplines, but who identify, even in their internal differences, with a method of analysis rooted in the Italian Workerist thought of the 1960s. On the other hand, it tries to clarify an issue that has provoked much debate in the last few (...)
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  18.  69
    Bio-informational capitalism.Michael A. Peters - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 110 (1):98-111.
    This essay builds on the literatures on ‘biocapitalism’ and ‘informationalism’ (or ‘informational capitalism’) to develop the concept of ‘bio-informational capitalism’ in order to articulate an emergent form of capitalism that is self-renewing in the sense that it can change and renew the material basis for life and capital as well as program itself. Bio-informational capitalism applies and develops aspects of the new biology to informatics to create new organic forms of computing and self-reproducing memory that in turn has become (...)
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  19.  22
    A Tidal Wave of Inevitable Data? Assetization in the Consumer Genomics Testing Industry.Nicole Gross & Susi Geiger - 2021 - Business and Society 60 (3):614-649.
    We bring together recent discussions on data capitalism and biocapitalization by studying value flows in consumer genomics firms—an industry at the intersection between health care and technology realms. Consumer genomics companies market genomic testing services to consumers as a source of fun, altruism, belonging and knowledge. But by maintaining a multisided or platform business model, these firms also engage in digital capitalism, creating financial profit from data brokerage. This is a precarious balance to strike: If these companies’ business models consist (...)
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  20.  21
    ‘Wittig and Davis, Woolf and Solanas (…) simmer within me’: Reading Feminist Archives in the Queer Writing of Paul B. Preciado.Elliot Evans - 2018 - Paragraph 41 (3):285-300.
    This article considers the relation between contemporary queer and transgender theory and the ‘second wave’ of feminism. Specifically, it explores the ways in which transgender theorist Paul B. Preciado's Testo Junkie: Sex, Drugs, and Biopolitics calls on feminist theorists, artists and activists of the second wave to explore transgender experience and embodiment, and to rethink gender in light of the new era of biocapitalism Preciado proposes. The article questions the way in which trajectories of feminism are conceived of, and (...)
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  21.  12
    The Techno-Barbie Speaks Back: Experiments with Gendered Hormones.Bryan Lim, Adam Christianson, Emily Jay Nicholls, Alexandra Aldridge & Alex Dymock - 2023 - Paragraph 46 (1):30-45.
    In Testo Junkie, Preciado briefly introduces the figure of the ‘techno-Barbie’. Contrasted with his own Testogel-fuelled pornographic experiments, the possibilities of oestrogen or progesterone seem somewhat uncharitably foreclosed upon. Though Preciado draws our attention to the gendered politics of chemical enhancement and hormonal justice, it begs the question: where do we draw the line between experimentation and chemical domination? We engage with the figure of the techno-Barbie to explore our own experiments with hormones and gendered agency in the boundaries of (...)
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  22.  6
    Geopolitics of reproduction: Investigating technological mediation of maternity tourism on the Russian web.Olga Boichak - 2019 - Big Data and Society 6 (2).
    Investigating maternity tourism to the United States from Russia through the lens of technological mediation, this study foregrounds the geopolitical patterns of human reproduction that shape, and are shaped by, individual choices of maternal healthcare in a neoliberal healthcare market. Following the history of a highly popular Russian-language forum, I demonstrate how this online community gets imbricated into communicative biocapitalism – a neoliberal logic that commodifies the voice of an online user, turning networked publics into markets for medical services. (...)
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  23.  15
    Reification of life-time.Sabeva Svetlana - 2021 - Metodo. International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy 9 (2):447-468.
    The article discusses the specifc reifcation of lived bodiliness in the dispositif of supermodern biotechnologies, biocapitalism, and biopower. The foundations of this reifcation are identifed in the separation of the classical modern unity of life and labor, i.e., in directing capital investment not so much towards the productivity of human labor as towards the productivity of biological life itself and the potentiality to extract so-called “biologically gained time”. But whose is the life that incorporates biologically gained time? The answer (...)
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  24.  7
    What's critical about critical realism?: essays in reconstructive social theory.Frédéric Vandenberghe - 2014 - New York: Routledge.
    What's Critical About Critical Realism?: Essays in Reconstructive Social Theory draws together 4 major articles that are situated at the intersection of philosophy and sociology. Preceded by a general presentation of Bhaskar ́s work, critical realism is used to reconstruct the generative structuralism of Pierre Bourdieu, warn about the dangers of biocapitalism, theorize about social movements and explore the hermeneutics of internal conversations. Together, the essays form a logical sequence that starts with a search for a solid conception of (...)
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  25. Property, Rights, and the constitution of contemporary Indian Biomedicine: Notes from the gleevec case.Kaushik Sunder Rajan - 2011 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 78 (3):975-998.
    Drawing upon an exemplary case surrounding a patent on the anti-cancer drug Gleevec, I trace how intellectual property regimes drive the re-institutionalization of pharmaceutical development in India today in unsettled and contested ways. I am interested in how this case resolves, in an apparent purification, into technical and constitutional components; how the technical components are entirely unsettled; and how the constitutional components open up questions regarding the relationship between biocapital and issues of constitutionalism, rights, and corporate social responsibility.
     
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  26.  36
    Biocapitalismo y feminización: transformaciones postfordistas en la economía política del patriarcado.María Tocino Rivas - 2021 - Isegoría 64:07-07.
    The aim is to address the feminization of work by framing it within the theories that interpret the current productive paradigm in terms of “biocapitalism”. In a context in which value accumulation is increasingly based upon the exploitation of the entirety of human faculties, the boundaries of modern “political economy of patriarchy” become blurred, since former reproductive activities are now transformed into productive work and reproductive work is turned into a paradigm for work as a whole.
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  27.  8
    Deleuze and Baudrillard: From Cyberpunk to Biopunk.Sean McQueen - 2016 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Sean McQueen rewrites and re-envisions Gilles Deleuze's and Jean Baudrillard's relationship with Marxism and with each other, from their breakdowns to their breakthroughs. He theorises shifts in and across critical approaches to capitalism, science, technology, psychoanalysis, literature and cinema and media studies. He also brings renewed Marxian readings to cyberpunk texts previously theorised by Deleuze and Baudrillard, and places them at the heart of the emergence of biopunk and its relation to biocapitalism by mapping their generic, technoscientific, libidinal and (...)
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  28.  7
    Dispersion of meaning: the fading out of the doctrinaire world?Matko Meštrović - 2008 - Newcastle, UK: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    This book present interdisciplinary research in the social sciences and humanities by connecting seemingly disparate sources through a sensitivity to endangered human values. It links reflections on the contemporary relationship between art and technology in a post-modern context, seeing art in terms of crossing boundaries and exploring virtuality. It deals with the consequences of economics colonising other disciplines, in terms of the processes by which the social becomes the economic. Using Jantsch''s evolutionary paradigm, the concept of self-transcendence is seen as (...)
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  29.  4
    Overlivings and the complexity of the lives we live.Stoyan Stavru - 2023 - Filosofiya-Philosophy 32 (2):232-237.
    The book consists of an Introduction, Three Parts (Part One “Lifetime and Society's Suffering: A Sociology of Generativity”; Part Two “The Generative World: Perspectives on Genetic Phenomenology” and Part Three “Promulgation of Generative Time: Towards a Phenomenological Critique of Biocapitalism”) and Epilogue. As the exhibition progresses, there is an increasing relevance of the subject of research, reaching a socio-analytical and critical review of fully presented events in contemporary times such as the global pandemic caused by COVID-19 (2020 – 2022) (...)
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  30.  30
    Sean McQueen. Deleuze and Baudrillard: From Cyberpunk to Biopunk. Reviewed by.Saramifar Younes - 2016 - Philosophy in Review 36 (6):270-272.
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  31.  1
    The Implications of Bio-philosophy and Biopolitics. 신승환 - 2019 - The Catholic Philosophy 32:69-100.
    이 논문은 생명철학과 생명정치학의 함의와 그 관계를 해명하려는 글이다. 생명에 대한 존재자적 탐구가 생명의 의미를 망각한다면 생명철학은 그 존재론적 의미를 밝히는 형이상학적 작업이다. 그에 비해 생명정치학은 생명체의 타당한 존재론적 터전을 정립하는 실천 철학의 영역에 속한다. 현대의 사회문화적 상황은 생명을 실용주의적 관점에 따라 대상화함으로써 생명이 생명으로 자리할 터전을 박탈한다. 이런 현대 사회의 생명성 망각과 생명 소외 현상을 넘어설 길을 생명철학의 존재론과 생명정치학의 실천철학에서 찾으려는 노력이 이 글에 담긴 근본 목적이다. 이를 위해 먼저 이 두 학문을 포괄하는 맥락에서 설정한 생명학의 범위와 내용을 (...)
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  32.  18
    Classifying, Constructing, and Identifying Life: Standards as Transformations of “The Biological”. [REVIEW]Brian Wynne, Lawrence Busch, Ruth McNally, Emma K. Frow, Rebecca Ellis, Claire Waterton & Adrian Mackenzie - 2013 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 38 (5):701-722.
    Recent accounts of “the biological” emphasize its thoroughgoing transformation. Accounts of biomedicalization, biotechnology, biopower, biocapital, and bioeconomy tend to agree that twentieth- and twenty-first-century life sciences transform the object of biology, the biological. Amidst so much transformation, we explore attempts to stabilize the biological through standards. We ask: how do standards handle the biological in transformation? Based on ethnographic research, the article discusses three contemporary postgenomic standards that classify, construct, or identify biological forms: the Barcoding of Life Initiative, the BioBricks (...)
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  33. Fabbriche della vita. La critica ecofemminista alle tecniche riproduttive artificiali.Enrico Maestri - 2011 - Ragion Pratica: Rivista semestrale 37 (2):417-442.
    The technological control of female bodies and the bio-political control of artificial reproduction have become central issues within feminist philosophical thinking, becoming an obligatory point of reference toward deepening the conceptual, political, social and symbolic connection between women's bodies and assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs). In this essay, my attention will be focused primarily on eco-feminist theses that firmly oppose the diffusion of assisted reproductive technologies and the legitimization of «pregnancy contracts». According to the «resistance eco-feminists», (those against ARTs), the process (...)
     
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