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Nanotechnology and the challenges of equity, equality and development / Susan E. Cozzens, Jameson M. Wetmore, eds.
2010
G 111 COZ.N
Available at WIPO Library
Items
Details
Title
Nanotechnology and the challenges of equity, equality and development / Susan E. Cozzens, Jameson M. Wetmore, eds.
Edition
First edition.
Description
xxx, 457 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm.
ISBN
9789048196142
9789048196159 electronic book
9048196159 electronic book
9048196140
9789048196159 electronic book
9048196159 electronic book
9048196140
Alternate Call Number
G 111 COZ.N
Summary
Nanotechnology is enabling applications in materials, microelectronics, health, and agriculture, which are projected to create the next big shift in production, comparable to the industrial revolution. Such major shifts always co-evolve with social relationships. This book focuses on how nanotechnologies might affect equity/equality in global society. Nanotechnologies are likely to open gaps by gender, ethnicity, race, and ability status, as well as between developed and developing countries, unless steps are taken now to create a different outcome. Organizations need to change their practices, and cultural ideas must be broadened if currently disadvantaged groups are to have a more equal position in nano-society rather than a more disadvantaged one. Economic structures are likely to shift in the nano-revolution, requiring policymakers and participatory processes to invent new institutions for social welfare, better suited to the new economic order than those of the past.
Note
Humanities, Social Science and Law (Springer-11648).
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note
1. Contexts of equity: thinking about organizational and technoscience contexts for gender equity in biotechnology and nanotechnology; 2. Women and patenting in nanotechnology: scale, scope and equity; 3. Potential implications for equity in the nanotechnology workforce in the U.S.; 4. Exploring societal impact of nanomedicine using public value mapping; 5. Ableism and favoritism for abilities governance, ethics and studies: new tools for nanoscale and nanoscale-enabled science and technology governance; 6. i Will go further; 7. Nanotechnology and the extension and transformation of inequity; Nanotechnology and the sixth technological revolution; 9. Innovation, growth, and inequality: plausible scenarios of wage disparities in a world with nanotechnologies; 10. Metropolitan development of nanotechnology: concentration or dispersion?; 11. The role of organized workers in the regulation of nanotechnologies; 12. ETUC resolution on nanotechnologies and nanomaterials; 13. Materializing nano equity: lessons from design; 14. Public perceptions of fairness in NBIC technologies; 15. Equity and participation in decisions: what can nanotechnology learn from biotechnology in Kenya?; 16. Nanotechnology: how prepared is Uganda?; 17. Nanotechnology and the poor: opportunities and risks for developing countries; 18. Science policy and social inclusion: advances and limits of Brazilian nanotechnology policy; 19. The potential of nanotechnology for equitable economic development: the case of Brazil; 20. Open access nanotechnology for developing countries: lessons from open source software; 21. Southern roles in global nanotechnology innovation: perspectives from Thailand and Australia; 22. How can nanotechnologies fulfill the needs of developing countrires?; 23. technical education and Indian society: the role of values; 24. Keeping the dream alive: what ELSI-research might learn from parliamentary technology assessment; 25. Nanotech ethics and the policymaking process: lessons learned for advancing equity and equality in emerging nanotechnologies; 26. Building equity and equality into nanotechnology.
Series
Yearbook of nanotechnology in society ; v. 2.
Published
Dordrecht : Springer Verlag, 2010.
Language
English
Record Appears in
Subject
Nanotechnology is enabling applications in materials, microelectronics, health, and agriculture, which are projected to create the next big shift in production, comparable to the industrial revolution. Such major shifts always co-evolve with social relationships. This book focuses on how nanotechnologies might affect equity/equality in global society. Nanotechnologies are likely to open gaps by gender, ethnicity, race, and ability status, as well as between developed and developing countries, unless steps are taken now to create a different outcome. Organizations need to change their practices, and cultural ideas must be broadened if currently disadvantaged groups are to have a more equal position in nano-society rather than a more disadvantaged one. Economic structures are likely to shift in the nano-revolution, requiring policymakers and participatory processes to invent new institutions for social welfare, better suited to the new economic order than those of the past.