LEADER 01990 am 22002773u 450 001 996320245003316 005 20181203 024 7 $a10.15460/HUP.10 035 $a(CKB)3790000000064159 035 $a(OAPEN)1002334 035 $a(EXLCZ)993790000000064159 100 $a20181203d|||| uy 101 0 $ager 135 $auuuuu---auuuu 200 10$aFreiheit, Kontrolle und Verantwortlichkeit in der Gesellschaft. Moderne Biotechnologie als Lehrstück 210 $aHamburg$cHamburg University Press$d2006 215 $a1 online resource (459) 311 $a3-937816-16-X 330 $aThe responsibility of science is the starting point for intensive discussions. But who is responsible ty for what? This work is based on many years of research into the developments in modern biotechnology. The thorough analysis shows that responsibility is usually borne by the others. Political, legal, administrative and intra-scientific communication and action structures prevent or dilute responsibility to the point of inaccessibility. Stephan Albrecht uses numerous examples from the fields of medicine, agriculture, pharmacy and environmental technology to demonstrate that biotechnological progress is not evolutionary but political, man-made. However, a fundamental error in this progress is that it is not properly understood and negotiated in public, as a res publica. From a democratic point of view, the author proposes an institutional approach to the perception of responsibility in and for the sciences, which is oriented towards the specific challenges of technological innovation and at the same time builds on the best practices of political and civic decision-making. 606 $aBiotechnology$2bicssc 615 7$aBiotechnology 700 $aAlbrecht$b Stephan$4aut$0780324 906 $aBOOK 912 $a996320245003316 996 $aFreiheit, Kontrolle und Verantwortlichkeit in der Gesellschaft. Moderne Biotechnologie als Lehrstück$92004994 997 $aUNISA