The governments of China, India, and the United Kingdom are unanimous in their belief that bioinformatics should supply the link between basic life sciences research and its translation into health benefits for the population and the economy. Yet at the same time, as ambitious states vying for position in the future global bioeconomy they differ considerably in the strategies adopted in pursuit of this goal. At the heart of these differences lies the interaction between epistemic change within the scientific community itself and the apparatus of the state. Drawing on desk-based research and thirty-two interviews with scientists and policy makers in the three countries, this article analyzes the politics that shape this interaction. From this analysis emerges an understanding of the variable capacities of different kinds of states and political systems to work with science in harnessing the potential of new epistemic territories in global life sciences innovation.
Bioinformatics and the Politics of Innovation in the Life Sciences
B. Salter,Yinhua Zhou,Saheli Datta,C. Salter
Published 2016 in Science, Technology and Human Values
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- Publication year
2016
- Venue
Science, Technology and Human Values
- Publication date
2016-02-24
- Fields of study
Biology, Sociology, Medicine, Political Science
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- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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