Institute on Biotechnology & the Human Future
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Chairman
• Nigel M. de S. Cameron
  CameronConfidential.blogspot.com

Fellows
• Adrienne Asch
• Brent Blackwelder
• Paige Comstock Cunningham
• Marsha Darling
• Jean Bethke Elshtain
• Kevin FitzGerald
• Debra Greenfield
• Amy Laura Hall
• Jaydee Hanson
• C. Christopher Hook
• Douglas Hunt
• William B. Hurlbut
• Andrew Kimbrell
• Abby Lippman
• Michele Mekel
• C. Ben Mitchell
• M. Ellen Mitchell
• Stuart A. Newman
• Judy Norsigian
• David Prentice
• Charles Rubin

Affiliated Scholars
• Sheri Alpert
• Diane Beeson
• Nanette Elster
• Rosario Isasi
• Henk Jochemsen
• Christina Bieber Lake
  Christina Bieber Lake's Blog
• Katrina Sifferd
• Tina Stevens
• Brent Waters

Co-founders
• Lori Andrews
• Nigel M. de S. Cameron



Institute on Biotechnology & the Human Future
565 W. Adams Street
Chicago Illinois
312.906.5337
info@thehumanfuture.org


past event



Center on Nanotechnology and Society
2nd Annual Nanopolicy Conference

Faces of Risk: Nanopolicy and the Agenda for Safety and Society
November 30, 2007
National Press Club
Washington, D.C.

see event


Association of Science-Technology Centers Nanopolicy Presentation (PDF)
by Margaret Glass
Risk and Nanotechnology - Who Will Bear The Risk Burden? (PDF)
by Bill Kojola
Feynman, Voltaire and Beckett on Nanotechnology (PDF)
by David Rejeski
Scientists and the Public-Discrepant Views About Nanotech (PDF)
by Dietram Schuefele


Additional Materials from David Rejeski:
Rejeski's project website - www.nanotechproject.org


Key addresses by members of Congress from the Center's first annual nanopolicy conference are now published in our comprehensive book on the implications of nanotechnology, NANOSCALE: ISSUES AND PERSPECTIVES FOR THE NANO CENTURY (edited by Nigel Cameron and M. Ellen Mitchell, John Wiley, 2007).

The second in our National Press Club conference series is focused specifically on risk, including safety issues and their regulatory implications, potential threats to human dignity and integrity, risk to investors and the business community. We have invited a wide range of expert participants to join us on November 30, and we hope you will join us too.

Speakers included:

• Shaun Clancy of the Evonik Degussa Corporation speaking for the American Chemistry Council;

• David Rejeski of the Project on Emerging Nanotechnologies at the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars;

• Charles Rubin of Duquesne University and frequent contributor to The New Atlantis;

• Jonathan Moreno of University of Pennsylvania and senior fellow at the Center for American Progress;

• Margaret Glass of the National Science Foundation-funded Nanoscale Informal Science Education Network (NISE Net);

• Dietram Schuefele of the University of Wisconsin, Madison;

• Bill Kojola of the AFL-CIO;

• Colin McCormick of the House Science Committee professional staff.
This event was co-sponsored by:
The Center for Policy on Emerging Technologies