| Literature DB >> 24478538 |
Abstract
This essay is based on ethnographic fieldwork conducted with the Indian community in Houston, as part of a NIH/NHGRI-sponsored ethics study and sample collection initiative entitled 'Indian and Hindu Perspectives on Genetic Variation Research.' Taking a cue from my Indian interlocutors who largely support and readily respond to such initiatives on the grounds that they will undoubtedly serve 'humanity' and the common good, I explore notions of the commons that are created in the process of soliciting blood for genetic research. How does blood become the stuff of which a civic discourse is made? How do idealistic individual appeals to donate blood, ethics research protocols, open-source databases, debates on approaches to genetic research, patents and Intellectual Property regulations, markets and the nation-state itself variously engage, limit or further ideas of the common good? Moving much as my interlocutors do, between India and the United States, I explore the nature of the commons that is both imagined and pragmatically reckoned in both local and global diasporic contexts.Entities:
Keywords: Indians in diaspora; blood donation; citizenship; commons; exchange; genetic research; market relations; public goods
Year: 2013 PMID: 24478538 PMCID: PMC3902168 DOI: 10.1080/09584935.2013.826626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Contemp South Asia ISSN: 0958-4935