Tag: synthetic biology

  • The bioeconomy in the news (or not)

    The bioeconomy in the news (or not)

    At meetings of the BBSRC/EPSRC funded Synthetic Biology Research Centre here at Nottingham the word ‘bioeconomy‘ crops up now and again, which is not surprising, as synthetic biology is supposed to be part of this new economy. In a blog post written in December last year the BBSRC’s Chief Executive Jackie Hunter pointed out that:…

  • Advanced fermenters

    Advanced fermenters

    I recently dipped my blogging toe into the microbiome, lured there by Jon Turney’s book I, Superorganism. A few days ago, while trying to find an old email on a completely unrelated topic, I came across a comment by Denis Noble that he had sent me when we were corresponding about the microbiome in around…

  • From recombinant DNA to genome editing: A history of responsible innovation?

    From recombinant DNA to genome editing: A history of responsible innovation?

    In this post I shall report on a recent call for ethical and regulatory reflection by scientists engaged in a new genomic technology. I’ll then put this into a historical context of previous initiatives of that kind, and finally ask whether this can be called ‘Responsible Research and Innovation’. CRISPR Recently, a new controversy has…

  • Synthetic biology markets: Opportunities and obstacles

    Synthetic biology markets: Opportunities and obstacles

    As some people know from my previous posts on synthetic biology, I am interested in tracing how synthetic biology is made public in the news media and whether or how it is becoming a matter of public debate. “Synthetic biology is an emerging area of research and is broadly described as the design and construction…

  • Making synthetic biology public: The case of XNAs and XNAzymes

    Making synthetic biology public: The case of XNAs and XNAzymes

    On 1 December a group of scientists at the University of Cambridge led by Dr Philipp Holliger published an article in the journal Nature in which they presented new findings within the field of synthetic biology. Both the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) and the Medical Research Council (MRC), who funded the research,…

  • Fermenting thought: A new look at synthetic biology

    Fermenting thought: A new look at synthetic biology

    I have become involved in a new project related to synthetic biology. The University of Nottingham has received funding for a big Synthetic Biology Research Centre. I am a social scientist within the new team and in charge of keeping an eye on ‘responsible research and innovation’. This is not what this post is about…

  • Handmaidens and plumbers: The role of the humanities and social sciences in modern academic life

    Handmaidens and plumbers: The role of the humanities and social sciences in modern academic life

    A few days ago I attended a student-organised conference on interdisciplinarity, Enquire, held at the School of Sociology and Social Policy here in Nottingham. Professor Alison Pilnick, a specialist in doctor-patient interaction and conversation analysis, gave a keynote lecture in which she explored some of the pitfalls of working between disciplines. In her conclusions she…

  • The story of ‘of’

    The story of ‘of’

    Since moving away from linguistics and into Science and Technology Studies (STS), I have often been asked what I am (a question I dread) and what I do (a question that is slightly more easy to answer). These questions came back to me recently when reading a very interesting article in New Scientist about the…