Biopower and the Contemporary

April 16, 2007

UC Berkeley: “Biotechnology in the 21st Century”: Biosecurity Lecture Series

by Karpiak

“Biotechnology in the 21st Century”: Biosecurity Lecture Series Lecture | April 18 | 7-9 p.m. | Faculty Club, O’Neill Room
Malcolm Dando, Professor of International Security and Director of the Bradford Disarmament Research Centre at the University of Bradford, UK

Goldman School of Public Policy
A series of 50 interactive seminars carried out over the last two years in six countries on three continents has shown that most practicing life scientists see little connection between the work they do and biowarfare and bioterrorism. Yet careful studies, for example in the US National Academies Fink and Lemon reports, show that there are real reasons for concern in that the ongoing revolution in the life sciences could facilitate malign misuse around the world. The presentation examines some of the relevant characteristics of modern biotechnology and assesses its potential impact on international security. Three future scenarios ranging from the benign to the malign are then outlined. Despite the obvious dangers, and the difficulties of agreeing effective international action, it is argued that there are opportunities to build on the relative success of the 2006 6th Five Year Review Conference of the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention (BTWC) and that life scientists can make an effective contribution to strengthening the prohibition of the malign misuse of the life sciences.
510-643-4581

Filed under Security at 7:23 pm

One Response to “UC Berkeley: “Biotechnology in the 21st Century”: Biosecurity Lecture Series”

  1. Monica Eppinger wrote:

    For those of us who are in fields far from Berkeley, how was this? Did he have an interesting take?

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