Environmental Reform Organizations and Undone Science in the United States: Exploring the Environmental,Health, and Safety Implications of Nanotechnology |
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Authors: | David J. Hess |
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Affiliation: | 1. Science and Technology Studies Department , Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute , Troy, USA hessd@rpi.edu |
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Abstract: | Environmental organizations have raised concerns about the environmental, health, and safety (EHS) implications of the hundreds of products containing nanomaterials that are now on the market. In the process they have drawn attention to the ‘undone science’ of EHS research and called for changes in both research and regulatory policy. Environmental and other advocacy organizations have been active in three policy fields in the United States: funding levels for EHS research, moratoria on the production of new nanomaterials largely based on the precautionary principle, and negotiations over definitions of safe or responsible nanotechnology with the private sector and the federal government. During the administration of President George W. Bush, calls for more research and industry guidelines met with greater success than those that called for moratoria and enhanced mandatory regulation. The more successful strategies tend to reproduce scientistic politics associated with risk assessment, whereas the less successful strategies would open up a broader public debate on the extent to which nanotechnology is needed or socially desirable. |
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Keywords: | Nanotechnology regulation health, risk social movements |
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