| Literature DB >> 32122265 |
Anja Bauer1, Alexander Bogner2.
Abstract
Synthetic biology is an emerging technoscience, which, so far, lacks a broader public debate. To foster early societal dialogue, a range of public engagement events have been initiated over the past decade. This article discusses the configurations of the emerging debate on synthetic biology in the context of the EU FP7 project SYNENERGENE. Drawing on notions of frames and framing in media studies and policy analysis, we ask which distinct frames are invoked and become dominant in current discussions about synthetic biology. Our analysis indicates significant reconfigurations in the framing of synthetic biology compared with previous biotechnology debates. Frames that traditionally served to problematize biotechnology, that is, ethics, risks, and economics, become less dominant. Instead, the potential to contribute to social progress is placed in the foreground. Moreover, discussions on ethics, risks, and governance frequently occur on an abstract level, invoking generic statements that could be made for any new technology.Entities:
Keywords: Responsible Research and Innovation; frames; framing; societal engagement; synthetic biology
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32122265 PMCID: PMC7411530 DOI: 10.1177/0963662520907255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Underst Sci ISSN: 0963-6625
Analysed events.
| No. | Event title | Date & place | Format and interactional character | Participants | Organizers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Workshop “Responsible Research and Innovation in Synthetic Biology” | 23–25 June 2014, Darmstadt, Germany | Stakeholder workshop, combining presentations and group discussions | ~50 stakeholders and experts | Institute for Technology Assessment and Systems Analysis (ITAS) at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT); Technical University Darmstadt; Schader Stiftung |
| 2 | BioFiction Science Art Film Festival | 23–25 October 2014, Vienna, Austria | Film festival + accompanying activities: conference, workshop on DIY-biology, a resident artist’s work in progress, dancing performance | 80–120 students, local public, experts, stakeholders | Biofaction (Research and Science Communication Company, Vienna) |
| 3 | Regional Stakeholder Workshop “Perspectives and Key Issues in Synthetic Biology: Opportunities, Risks and Policies” | 18–19 June 2015, Ljubljana, Slovenia | Stakeholder workshop, combining presentations, and group discussions | 40 stakeholders and experts | University of Ljubljana |
| 4 | Science on Stage: “Supernova SynBio Hack Mack” | 28 June 2015, Karlsruhe, Germany | Theatre play including Q&A session with audience | ~40 local public, 2 experts | ITAS/KIT in collaboration with the Centre for Cultural and General Studies at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (ZAK/KIT) & Badische Staatstheater |
| 5 | Thematic Congress “Re-engineering Life or do we want to be eternal?” | 3–4 July 2015, Freiburg, Germany | Combination of panel discussions, theatrical performances, speed dating with experts, film presentation, acoustic and a graphic performance | 30–60 students, local public, experts | Theatre Freiburg; University of Freiburg; Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne |
| 6 | Public Outreach Event “Talks of the Town: From Karl Drais to Synthetic Biology” | 16 September 2015, Karlsruhe, Germany | Panel discussion | 130 local public, 3 experts | ITAS/ KIT in collaboration with ZAK/ KIT |
| 7 | Workshop “Antimicrobial Resistance and Synthetic Biology” | 23–24 March 2016, Amsterdam, The Netherlands | Stakeholder workshop, combining presentations and scenario workshops | 14–19 stakeholders, experts | Rathenau Instituut of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences |
| 8 | Synthetic Biology Forum “Synthetic Biology–Visions of the Future” | 24–25 June 2016, Amsterdam, The Netherlands | 1st day: stakeholder conference combining presentations and panel discussions | 80–180 experts, stakeholders, local public | Rathenau Instituut in collaboration with SYNENERGENE partners |
| 9 | Science Café “Altering plants, microbes and people” | 23 November 2016, Bristol, United Kingdom | Input by scientists, extended Q&A with audience | ~50 local public, 6 scientists | University of Bristol (BrisSynbio Centre for Public Engagement) |
| 10 | SYNENERGENE Online Debate | May–June 2017 | Online platform with introductory texts and videos, opportunities to post comments and questions, answered by experts | 18 high school students, 3 experts | Zebralog; University of Bristol; ITAS/KIT |
Frames in the synbio discourse.
| Frame | Core narratives | Frame-signifying elements (key issues, examples, metaphors, arguments) |
|---|---|---|
| Science | (a) Synbio as (continuous) scientific progress | Crispr/Cas 9, gene drives, precision, speed |
| Social progress | (a) Synbio as a key for solving societal challenges | Grand challenges: bioeconomy, environment, health, food |
| Risks and control | (a) Synbio as risks concerning biosafety and biosecurity | Lab accidents, criminal or terrorist misuse, DIY-biology |
| Ethics | (a) Ethics is key to RRI | Ethics as a driver of innovations, societal benefits and values (autonomy, privacy etc.) |
| Economics | (a) Synbio as manifestation of neoliberal and capitalist appropriation of nature | Monopolization, big industries, patenting of life, exploitation of nature |
| Governance | (a) Synbio regulation and risk assessment | Comparison to GMO regulation, tentative governance |
RRI: Responsible Research and Innovation; GMO: genetically modified organisms.