NEOLIBERALISM ON THE MOLECULAR
SCALE (full
version; pdf)
Economic and Genetic Reductionism in Biotechnology
Battles
ABSTRACT
New agro-biotechnologies promise bounty from fine-tuned
molecular manipulation of food crops. They already provide profits and
export opportunities to a few transnational seed/ agrochemical/ biotechnology
firms. Against growing resistance in international arenas, industry and
US government spokespeople have aggressively promoted genetic engineering,
arguing that it permits precise control of life processes.
However, this
claim is based on a deceptive form of molecular-genetic reductionism which
uses outdated notions of “genes” and “genetic codes”
and disregards the interactions among molecules, organisms, their environments,
and their social settings. This discourse, in turn, supports economic-reductionist
arguments that genetic information should be patentable and that market-based
management of biotechnology will benefit everyone. This double reductionism
furthers the extension of the commodity realm to the molecular level. It
treats biotechnology inputs (genetic resources) and outputs (transgenic
products) as ordinary, tradable factors of production under globally standardized
intellectual property regimes and bolsters proposals to regulate biotechnology
under the World Trade Organization.
Critics of this approach find some
support in the Biodiversity Convention and its Biosafety Protocol, which
would allow consideration of scientific uncertainty, socioeconomic factors,
and pluralism in intellectual property regimes. They stress that natural-resource
values and knowledge about nature are inseparable from place-specific ecologies,
cultural practices of farming and science, and power relations. |