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Born and Made
A01=Celia Roberts
A01=Sarah Franklin
Abortion
Adoption
Aldous Huxley
Amniocentesis
Artificial insemination
Assisted reproductive technology
Author_Celia Roberts
Author_Sarah Franklin
Bioethics
Biomedicine
Bioprospecting
Birth control
Category=PSAK
Chorionic villus sampling
Clinical trial
Clinician
Death
Degenerative disease
Deliberation
Designer baby
Embryo
Emerging technologies
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
Ethnography
Eugenics
Euthanasia
Genetic counseling
Genetic discrimination
Genetic testing
Immortalised cell line
Impossibility
In vitro fertilisation
Indication (medicine)
Infertility
Intracytoplasmic sperm injection
Leon Kass
Liminality
Louise Brown
Medical genetics
Miscarriage
Mrs.
Obstetrics and gynaecology
Orwellian
Our Posthuman Future
Ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome
Pathology
Paul Rabinow
Personal History
Pessimism
Pituitary tumour
Polar body
Practical Ethics
Pregnancy rate
Preimplantation genetic diagnosis
Prenatal diagnosis
Quality assurance
Recurrent miscarriage
Reproductive History
Reproductive medicine
Risk society
Robert Edwards (physiologist)
Sarah Franklin
Savior sibling
Scientist
Slippery slope
Spinal muscular atrophy
Stem cell
Superiority (short story)
Surrogacy
Technology
The Philosopher
Tissue typing
Ulrich Beck
Uncertainty
Product details
- ISBN 9780691121932
- Weight: 425g
- Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
- Publication Date: 19 Nov 2006
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Are new reproductive and genetic technologies racing ahead of a society that is unable to establish limits to their use? Have the "new genetics" outpaced our ability to control their future applications? This book examines the case of preimplantation genetic diagnosis (PGD), the procedure used to prevent serious genetic disease by embryo selection, and the so-called "designer baby" method. Using detailed empirical evidence, the authors show that far from being a runaway technology, the regulation of PGD over the past fifteen years provides an example of precaution and restraint, as well as continual adaptation to changing social circumstances. Through interviews, media and policy analysis, and participant observation at two PGD centers in the United Kingdom, Born and Made provides an in-depth sociological examination of the competing moral obligations that define the experience of PGD.
Among the many novel findings of this pathbreaking ethnography of reproductive biomedicine is the prominence of uncertainty and ambivalence among PGD patients and professionals--a finding characteristic of the emerging "biosociety," in which scientific progress is inherently paradoxical and contradictory. In contrast to much of the speculative futurology that defines this field, Born and Made provides a timely and revealing case study of the on-the-ground decision-making that shapes technological assistance to human heredity.
Sarah Franklin is Professor of the Social Study of Biomedicine in the Department of Sociology at the London School of Economics and Political Science. Celia Roberts is a Lecturer in Sociology at Lancaster University.
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