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This book presents a historicised account of the Feminist
International Network of Resistance to Reproductive and Genetic
Engineering (FINRRAGE), a coordinated effort during the 1980s and
1990s by an international group of women to create and disseminate
feminist knowledge about the then-new field of reproductive
technologies. Bringing insights from science and technology studies
together with social movements and feminist theory, it seeks to
examine larger questions about knowledge and expertise in activist
engagements with rapidly-developing technologies, as well as
explore an important and neglected episode of feminist history. Its
findings will be relevant to scholars in science studies, gender
and women's studies and social movements, as well as to anyone with
an interest in reproductive technologies and the history of
feminist activism.
This book presents a historicised account of the Feminist
International Network of Resistance to Reproductive and Genetic
Engineering (FINRRAGE), a coordinated effort during the 1980s and
1990s by an international group of women to create and disseminate
feminist knowledge about the then-new field of reproductive
technologies. Bringing insights from science and technology studies
together with social movements and feminist theory, it seeks to
examine larger questions about knowledge and expertise in activist
engagements with rapidly-developing technologies, as well as
explore an important and neglected episode of feminist history. Its
findings will be relevant to scholars in science studies, gender
and women's studies and social movements, as well as to anyone with
an interest in reproductive technologies and the history of
feminist activism.
Critically assessing growth-based models of innovation policy, this
enlightening study sparks new debate on the role and nature of
responsible innovation. Drawing on insights from economics,
politics, and science and technology studies, it proposes the
concept of 'responsible stagnation' as an expansion of present
discussions about growth, degrowth, responsibility and innovation
within planetary limitations. This important intervention explores
real-world relationships between the political economy, innovation
policy and concepts of responsibility, and will be an invaluable
resource for individuals and civil society organizations who seek
to promote responsible innovation.
Cutting across disciplines from science and technology studies to
the arts and humanities, this thought-provoking collection engages
with key issues of social exclusion, inequality, power and
knowledge in the context of COVID-19. The authors use the crisis as
a lens to explore the contours of contemporary societies and lay
bare the ways in which orthodox conceptions of the human condition
can benefit a privileged few. Highlighting the lived experiences of
marginalized groups from around the world, this is a
boundary-spanning critical intervention to ongoing debates about
the pandemic. It presents new ways of thinking in public policy,
culture and the economy, and points the way forward to a more
equitable and inclusive human future. Chapter 12 is available Open
Access via OAPEN under CC-BY-NC-ND licence.
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