Examining the regulation of technologies, this book explores how
the drive to harmonize regulatory policies across the world is at
odds with the increasingly diverse local settings in which they are
implemented. The authors use a 'framings' approach that starts with
the concerns and experiences of technology users and works
'upwards' in order to examine how best to improve regulation. The
book centres around two in-depth case study topics: regulation of
transgenic cotton seed and regulation of antibiotics, compared
across situations in China and Argentina. The authors examine how
high-level initiatives in regulatory harmonization and regulatory
capacity building compare with national policies, day-to-day
enforcement realities on the ground, and with the way poorer users
experience these technologies. Through these studies the authors
offer ways to rethink regulation in order to realign the power and
politics at play and create more effective regulation for
technology users around the world. Published in association with
the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC).
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