Literature DB >> 25789799

A post-genomic surprise. The molecular reinscription of race in science, law and medicine.

Troy Duster1.   

Abstract

The completion of the first draft of the Human Genome Map in 2000 was widely heralded as the promise and future of genetics-based medicines and therapies - so much so that pundits began referring to the new century as 'The Century of Genetics'. Moreover, definitive assertions about the overwhelming similarities of all humans' DNA (99.9 per cent) by the leaders of the Human Genome Project were trumpeted as the end of racial thinking about racial taxonomies of human genetic differences. But the first decade of the new century brought unwelcomed surprises. First, gene therapies turned out to be far more complicated than any had anticipated - and instead the pharmaceutical industry turned to a focus on drugs that might be 'related' to population differences based upon genetic markers. While the language of 'personalized medicine' dominated this frame, research on racially and ethnically designated populations differential responsiveness to drugs dominated the empirical work in the field. Ancestry testing and 'admixture research' would play an important role in a new kind of molecular reification of racial categories. Moreover, the capacity of the super-computer to map differences reverberated into personal identification that would affect both the criminal justice system and forensic science, and generate new levels of concern about personal privacy. Social scientists in general, and sociologists in particular, have been caught short by these developments - relying mainly on assertions that racial categories are socially constructed, regionally and historically contingent, and politically arbitrary. While these assertions are true, the imprimatur of scientific legitimacy has shifted the burden, since now 'admixture research' can claim that its results get at the 'reality' of human differentiation, not the admittedly flawed social constructions of racial categories. Yet what was missing from this framing of the problem: 'admixture research' is itself based upon socially constructed categories of race. © London School of Economics and Political Science 2015.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Reductionism; genetics; post-genomic; racial admixture; reification

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25789799     DOI: 10.1111/1468-4446.12118

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Sociol        ISSN: 0007-1315


  19 in total

1.  Genes, Race, and Causation: US Public Perspectives About Racial Difference.

Authors:  Simon Outram; Joseph L Graves; Jill Powell; Chantelle Wolpert; Kerry L Haynie; Morris W Foster; Jessica W Blanchard; Anna Hoffmeyer; Robert P Agans; Charmaine Dm Royal
Journal:  Race Soc Probl       Date:  2018-02-23

2.  Racialized Risk in Clinical Care: Clinician Vigilance and Patient Responsibility.

Authors:  Hannah S Bell; Funmi Odumosu; Anna C Martinez-Hume; Heather A Howard; Linda M Hunt
Journal:  Med Anthropol       Date:  2018-06-18

3.  Consumer (dis-)interest in Genetic Ancestry Testing: The roles of race, immigration, and ancestral certainty.

Authors:  Adam L Horowitz; Aliya Saperstein; Jasmine Little; Martin Maiers; Jill A Hollenbach
Journal:  New Genet Soc       Date:  2019-01-20

4.  "We Don't Need a Swab in Our Mouth to Prove Who We Are": Identity, Resistance, and Adaptation of Genetic Ancestry Testing among Native American Communities.

Authors:  Jessica W Blanchard; Simon Outram; Gloria Tallbull; Charmaine D M Royal
Journal:  Curr Anthropol       Date:  2019-10

5.  Use of Race in Kidney Research and Medicine: Concepts, Principles, and Practice.

Authors:  Dinushika Mohottige; L Ebony Boulware; Chandra L Ford; Camara Jones; Keith C Norris
Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol       Date:  2021-11-17       Impact factor: 8.237

6.  A Qualitative Analysis of How Anthropologists Interpret the Race Construct.

Authors:  Jayne O Ifekwunigwe; Jennifer K Wagner; Joon-Ho Yu; Tanya M Harrell; Michael J Bamshad; Charmaine D Royal
Journal:  Am Anthropol       Date:  2017-08-14

7.  "I don't have to know why it snows, I just have to shovel it!": Addiction Recovery, Genetic Frameworks, and Biological Citizenship.

Authors:  Molly J Dingel; Jenny Ostergren; Kathleen Heaney; Barbara A Koenig; Jennifer McCormick
Journal:  Biosocieties       Date:  2017-07-11

8.  Knowing something versus feeling different:The effects and non-effects of genetic ancestry on racial identity.

Authors:  Janet K Shim; Sonia Rab Alam; Bradley E Aouizerat
Journal:  New Genet Soc       Date:  2018-02-12

9.  Genomic research, publics and experts in Latin America: Nation, race and body.

Authors:  Peter Wade; Carlos López-Beltrán; Eduardo Restrepo; Ricardo Ventura Santos
Journal:  Soc Stud Sci       Date:  2015-12       Impact factor: 3.885

Review 10.  Population Genomics and the Statistical Values of Race: An Interdisciplinary Perspective on the Biological Classification of Human Populations and Implications for Clinical Genetic Epidemiological Research.

Authors:  Koffi N Maglo; Tesfaye B Mersha; Lisa J Martin
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2016-02-17       Impact factor: 4.599

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