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Nanotechnology - risk, ethics and law
Edited by Geoffrey Hunt and Michael Mehta
Earthscan
June 2006
Hardback 320 pages ISBN 9781844073580
£89.00
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Paperback 320 pp ISBN 9781844075836
£30.00
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- Nanotechnology is the new GM, with $5 billion in funding, involving thousands of companies
and universities: imagine a world in which machines repair damaged cells € or destroy healthy ones
- This is the first book to take stock of the risks and benefits of nanotechnology, and
the complex ethical and legal questions facing governments, the public, investors and businesses worldwide
- An accessible popular science book for all interested in the fascinating and unpredictable
science, law, policy and regulation of nanotech
Nanotechnology 'technology at the molecular level' is held out by many as the
Holy Grail for creating a trillion dollar economy and solving problems from curing cancer to
reprocessing waste into products and building super-fast computers. Yet, as with GMOs,
many view nanotech as a high risk genie in a bottle that once uncorked has the potential to
cause unpredictable, perhaps irreversible, environmental and public health disasters.
With the race to bring products to market, there is pressing need to take stock of the situation and to
have a full public debate about this new technological frontier. Including contributions by renowned figures
such as Roland Clift, K. Eric Drexler and Arpad Pusztai, this is the first global overview of the state
of nanotech and society in Europe, the USA, Japan and Canada, examining the ethics, the environmental
and public health risks, and the governance and regulation of this most promising, and potentially most dangerous,
of all technologies.
Contents
Introduction: The Challenge of Nanotechnologies
Part I: Introducing Nanotechnology
- Nanotechnology: From 'Wow' to 'Yuck'?
- Nanotechnology: From Feynman to Funding
- Microsystems and Nanoscience for Biomedical Applications: A View to the Future
- Nanotechnoscience and Complex Systems: The Case for Nanology
Part II: Regional Developments
- Nanotechnologies and Society in Japan
- Nanotechnologies and Society in the USA
- Nanotechnologies and Society in Europe
- Nanotechnologies and Society in Canada
Part III: Benefits and Risks
- From Biotechnology to Nanotechnology: What can We Learn from Earlier Technologies
- Getting Nanotechnology Right the First Time
- Risk Management and Regulation in an Emerging Technology
- Nanotechnology and Nanoparticle Toxicity: A Case for Precaution
- The Future of Nanotechnology in Food Science and Nutrition: Can Science Predict its Safety?
Part IV: Ethics and Public Understanding
- The Global Ethics of Nanotechnology
- Going Public: Risk, Trust and Public Understanding of Nanotechnologies
- Dwarfing the Social? Nanotechnology Lessons from the Biotechnology Front
Part V: Law and Regulation
- Nanotechnologies and the Law of Patents: A Collision Course
- Nanotechnologies and Civil Liability
- Nanotechnologies and the Ethical Conduct of Research Involving Human Subjects
- Nanotechnologies and Corporate Criminal Liability
Part VI: Conclusion
- What makes Nanotechnologies Special?
Appendix
Index
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