Presenting FuturesErik Fisher, Cynthia Selin, Jameson Wetmore Welcome to the ?rst volume of the Yearbook of Nanotechnology in Society! Nanotechnology, hailed as “the next industrial revolution” (NSTC 2000) and c- tiqued for being little more than “hype” (Berube 2006), is the site of a great deal of social and intellectual contest. With some ten billion dollars being spent worldwide on nanotechnology research and development annually and a market forecast of trillions of dollars in sales in the medium-term future (Lux Research 2006), nations and ?rms are pursuing nano-related goals with high levels of both effort and - pectations. Yet according to the Woodrow Wilson International Center’s web-based Nanotechnology Consumer Products Inventory, most of the more than 500 na- products on the market as of this writing are basic consumer items—cosmetics, clothing, athletic equipment and the like—with modest, incremental improvements on their non-nano counterparts. Nanotechnology is also the site of an increasing amount of scholarship dedicated to understanding the interactions between society and an emerging knowled- based technological endeavor. Searching the Web of Science indices in social s- ence and humanities for nanotech* and nanoparticle*, for example, yields 231 hits 1 since 1990, but 75 percent of these occur in 2004 through 2007. This scholarship attempts to fathom the implications of nanotechnologies for society, as well as the implications for nanotechnologies of society. Some of it is also engaged in dialogue with both the public and with nanotechnology researchers about the hope and the hype described above. |
Contents
The Future Is Coming Sooner than You Think | 1 |
The Workers Push to Democratize Nanotechnology | 23 |
Thinking Longer Term about Technology | 37 |
Constructive Technology Assessment and SocioTechnical Scenarios | 49 |
How Lux Research Forecasts | 71 |
Nanoscale Research Facilities | 91 |
What Drives Public Acceptance of Nanotechnology? | 109 |
Nanologue | 117 |
Your Children Their Children | 147 |
A Case for Reflective | 163 |
Communications in the Age of Nanotechnology | 183 |
Manufactured Nanoparticle Health and Safety Disclosure Draft | 201 |
Challenges and the Way Forward | 227 |
Problems and Methods | 241 |
Pitfalls in Assessing | 265 |
Science Fiction NanoEthics and the Moral Imagination | 291 |
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Page xvii - Chairman of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University and serves on the board of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.