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This collective monograph aims at contributing to an improved
understanding of the epistemic presumptions, sociocultural
implications and historically backgrounds of the newly emerging and
currently expanding approach of systems biology. In doing so, it
offers empirically grounded, valuable and reflexive information
about a paradigmatic shift in the biosciences for a wide range of
scientists working in the interdisciplinary areas of systems
biology, synthetic biology, molecular biology, biology, the
philosophy of science, the sociology of science and scientific
knowledge, science and technology studies, technology assessment
and the like. The authors of this monograph share the theoretical
methodological premise that science is a culturally and socially
embedded practice which characterizes our culture as a scientific
one and at the same time draws its innovative potential from its
socio-cultural context. This dialectic relationship lies at the
heart of the current development of systems biology which is
conceived as a so-called successor of '-omics' research and
triggered by high-throughput information technologies. At the same
time a need for a holistic conceptualization of complex biological
processes emerges. The title Contextualizing Systems Biology
suggests that this book analyzes the development and advent of
systems biology from different theoretical and methodological
perspectives. We investigate a variety of contexts ranging from the
analysis of cognitive contexts (such as basic theoretical concepts)
to regulative contexts (policies) to the concrete application of a
systems biology in the socio-scientific context of a European
research project. In empirically analyzing these different and
interrelated layers and dimensions of systems biology, the scope of
the book goes beyond present attempts to investigate the advent of
new approaches in the biological sciences as it frames and assesses
systems biology from an interdisciplinary and integrated
perspective.
In this remarkable book, David-Emil Wickstrom traces the
transcultural flow of popular music production emanating from St.
Petersburg, a central hub of the Russian music scene. With a
specific focus on the post-Soviet emigrant community in Germany and
their event 'Russendisko', Wickstrom -- himself a trumpet player in
two local bands -- explores St Petersburg's vibrant music scene,
which provides an electrifying platform for musical exchange. The
findings shed a new light on Soviet and post-Soviet popular music
history and even Russia's relationship to Ukraine. Wickstrom
demonstrates the filtering processes embedded in transcultural
flows and how music is attributed new meanings within new contexts.
This innovative book not only promotes a deeper understanding of
the role of popular music in society, it also enables a better
comprehension of cultural processes in the second decade after the
fall of the Soviet Union.
With the advancement of molecular technologies, genetic research
has made enormous progress over the last decade. To facilitate
genetic research, the collection, the integration, and the
exploitation of data are prerequisite. However, genetic data -
which provides information not only about the individual person,
but also about his/her family, parentage, and ethnic decent - is
regarded as both the most valuable and vulnerable data, worthy of
protection by any and all means. On the other hand, clinical
research makes it necessary to disclose and exchange genetic data.
In order to resolve this dilemma, ethical and legal requirements
must be observed. To this end, this book provides an in-depth
overview of the respective requirements. It examines the European
Data Protection Directive 95/46/EC and its impact on Trans-European
Research Projects and other genetic research networks. The book
will appeal to both academics and professionals in various fields
including medical law, biotechnology, ethics, and policy making.
This collective monograph aims at contributing to an improved
understanding of the epistemic presumptions, sociocultural
implications and historically backgrounds of the newly emerging and
currently expanding approach of systems biology. In doing so, it
offers empirically grounded, valuable and reflexive information
about a paradigmatic shift in the biosciences for a wide range of
scientists working in the interdisciplinary areas of systems
biology, synthetic biology, molecular biology, biology, the
philosophy of science, the sociology of science and scientific
knowledge, science and technology studies, technology assessment
and the like. The authors of this monograph share the theoretical
methodological premise that science is a culturally and socially
embedded practice which characterizes our culture as a scientific
one and at the same time draws its innovative potential from its
socio-cultural context. This dialectic relationship lies at the
heart of the current development of systems biology which is
conceived as a so-called successor of '-omics' research and
triggered by high-throughput information technologies. At the same
time a need for a holistic conceptualization of complex biological
processes emerges. The title Contextualizing Systems Biology
suggests that this book analyzes the development and advent of
systems biology from different theoretical and methodological
perspectives. We investigate a variety of contexts ranging from the
analysis of cognitive contexts (such as basic theoretical concepts)
to regulative contexts (policies) to the concrete application of a
systems biology in the socio-scientific context of a European
research project. In empirically analyzing these different and
interrelated layers and dimensions of systems biology, the scope of
the book goes beyond present attempts to investigate the advent of
new approaches in the biological sciences as it frames and assesses
systems biology from an interdisciplinary and integrated
perspective.
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