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Biosecurity, Bioterrorism and the Governance of Science: the increasing convergence of science and security policy
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-26, 09:03 authored by Caitriona McLeish, Paul NightingalePaul NightingaleScience and security policy are increasingly overlapping because of concerns that legitimate research might be misapplied to develop biological weapons. This has led to an expansion of security policy to cover broad areas of research and scienti?c practice, including funding, publishing, peer-review, employment, materials transfer, post-graduate teaching and academics’ ability to design and perform experiments and disseminate research. Such changes raise policy concerns because many of the technologies used to produce biological weapons are ‘dual use’ and have legitimate peaceful applications. As a result, attempts to control their generation, diffusion or application can have unintended impacts on socially bene?cial applications. This paper explores recent changes in the governance of science and technology and contributes to future policy making by assessing the relative merits of understanding the development of dual use policy in terms of either technology transfer or technology convergence.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Research PolicyIssue
10Volume
36Page range
1635-1654Department affiliated with
- SPRU - Science Policy Research Unit Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes