Biobanks : governance in comparative perspective

Bibliographic Information

Biobanks : governance in comparative perspective

edited by Herbert Gottweis and Alan Petersen

Routledge, 2008

  • : hbk.
  • : pbk.

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In recent years, a number of large population-based biobanks - genetic databases that combine genetic information derived from blood samples with personal data about environment, medical history, lifestyle or genealogy - have been set up in order to study the interface between disease, and genetic and environmental factors. Unsurprisingly, these studies have sparked a good deal of controversy and the ethical and social implications have been widely debated. Biobanks: Governance in Comparative Perspective is the first book to explore the political and governance implications of biobanks in Europe, the United States, Asia, and Australia. This book explores: the interrelated conditions needed for a biobank to be created and to exist the rise of the new bio-economy the redefinition of citizenship accompanying national biobank developments This groundbreaking book makes clear that biobanks are a phenomenon that cannot be disconnected from considerations of power, politics, and the reshaping of current practices in governance. It will be a valuable read for scholars and students of genetics, bioethics, risk, public health and the sociology of health and illness.

Table of Contents

Part 1: Conceptualising biobanks 1. Biobanks and governance: an introduction 2. Biobanks in action: new strategies in the governance of life Part 2: How to build a biobank: comparing different approaches 3. The rise and fall of a biobank: the case of Iceland 4. Estonia: ups and downs of a biobank project 5. Patient organizations as the (un)usual suspects: the biobanking activities of the Association Francaise contre les Myopathies and its Genethon DNA and Cell Bank 6. 'This is not a national biobank...': the politics of local biobanks in Germany 7. Governing DNA: prospects and problems in the proposed large United States population cohort 8. Governance by stealth: large-scale pharmacogenomics and biobanking in Japan Part 3: Biobanks, publics, and citizenship 9. UK Biobank: bioethics as a technology of governance 10. Biobanks and the biopolitics of inclusion and representation 11. The informed consenters: governing biobanks in Scandinavia 12. Framing consent: the politics of 'engagement' in an Australian biobank project 13. Governing through biobanks: Research populations in Israel

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