Key Speakers: Stefan Beck, Marcus Düwell, Ulrike Felt, Dietmar Mieth, Carlos Novas, Brian Salter, Jan Staman
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Over the last few decades, biomedical technologies have played a crucial role in re-engineering the human body on multiple levels, as well as in re-defining individual and collective identities. These processes challenge established cultural understandings, the way we govern new technologies as well as bioethical reflection. With the enlargement and integration of the European Union questions relating to common governance of biomedical technologies including a European bioethics framework have to be critically addressed both theoretically and empirically. Which roles do socio-cultural differences play and how do they figure in shaping bodies and identities? What are the impacts on civic approaches to technologies, ethical argumentation and visions of governing? How are these differences handled in a common Europe?
To address these issues, this conference builds on a comparative and interdisciplinary European research project “Challenges of Biomedicine”. Going beyond the project it aims to bring together academics from bioethics, science and technology studies, cultural anthropology, medicine as well as policy makers on European and national levels.
The goals of the conference are to
- discuss empirical work and ethical reflection related to the topic of socio-cultural varieties in re-engineering bodies as well as concepts of choice, agency and identity
- investigate the implications of biomedical technologies for the delivery of health care and the public health
- debate implications of biomedical technologies for European and national policy arenas
- reflect on the methodological challenges of comparative and cross-disciplinary research
Plenary lectures addressing the key issues will be alternated by parallel sessions which are meant to bring together genuine empirical and theoretical work carried out in these areas within the project as well as by invited researchers.