Regulation of synthetic biology biobricks, biopunks and bioentrepreneurs
Material type: TextSeries: Publication details: UK Edward Elgar 2018Description: ix, 407 p. 24 cmISBN:- 9781785369438
- 343.786606 23 MC-R
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 343.786606 MC-R (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 143024 |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 364-392) and index.
Introduction -- Making biology easy to engineer : the science of synthetic biology, the emergence of the field and its major applications -- Science meets politics, activists and governance : evaluating key positions in synthetic biology debates -- New directions? : the United States Presidential Commission's investigation of synthetic biology's risks, benefits and oversight -- Environmental risk : uncertainty, precaution, prudent vigilance and adaptation -- Synthetic biology, biosafety and 'biopunks' -- Biosecurity : potential for deliberate misuse of synthetic biology -- How will patents affect synthetic biology? -- Building with BioBricks : a commons for sharing synthetic biology research -- Conclusion and future directions.
"This book explores the interplay between regulation and emerging technologies in the context of synthetic biology, a developing field that promises great benefits, and has already yielded fuels and medicines made with designer micro-organisms. For all its promise, however, it also poses various risks. Investigating the distinctiveness of synthetic biology and the regulatory issues that arise, [the author] questions whether synthetic biology can be regulated within existing structures or whether new mechanisms are needed. Adopting an interdisciplinary approach, [the author] draws on diverse areas of law, the science of synthetic biology and the history and sociology of science. [The author] concludes that synthetic biology presents novel regulatory challenges relating to environmental risk, biosafety, biosecurity and intellectual property. These challenges arise from the uniqueness of the science, the nature of its communities of scientists (including citizen scientists or 'biobunks') and the uncertainty surrounding possible hazards. Some scientists see intellectual property protection as a way to push innovation forward (bioentrepreneurs), while others openly share synthetic biology tools such as BioBricks. By understanding the range of regulatory challenges, the book make a case for enhanced regulation that protects us from synthetic biology's risks, whilst capturing its potential to improve our world."--
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