posted on 2024-09-06, 07:40authored byAndy Stirling, Dominic Glover, Erik Millstone
Charges against critics of genetic engineering (GE) often take four general forms. But all of them, we argue, are unsupported by facts.
First, scientific and policy debates are not, as claimed, polarized in black and white, divided simply into two contending camps. Second, there is no genuine consensus within the scientific community about the safety and acceptability of innovations produced using GE. Third, allegations of costly overregulation presuppose that there is reliable and complete foreknowledge of benefits as well as any and all possible risks, but such scientific hubris should never be treated as an adequate substitute for systematic investigations. Fourth, common representations of GE as an incremental, innocuous innovation that poses no special risks and requires no special regulation is inconsistent with the biotechnology corporations’ insistence that GE is a radical innovation that deserves special protection and incentives.
Funding
Default funder
History
Publisher
Issues in Science and Technology
Citation
Stirling. A.; Glover. D. and Millstone. E. Regulating Genetic Engineering: The Limits And Politics Of Knowledge, Issues in Science and Technology, Volume XXXI Issue 4, Summer 2015