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Biotech calls out for integrity, transparency: social vision is needed.


RECENT developments in the biological sciences, including genomics, the science of gene mapping gene mapping
n.
The determination of the sequence of genes and their relative distances from one another on a specific chromosome.
 and manipulation, have the potential to change human life in ways that make the industrial revolution look like a Sunday school Sunday school, institution for instruction in religion and morals, usually conducted in churches as part of the church organization but sometimes maintained by other religious or philanthropic bodies.

In England during the 18th cent.
 picnic. They offer enormous opportunities for benefit, yet they also bring considerable risk of harm.

The question that must be asked is what sort of social vision is driving these developments and being reinforced by them?

The biblical Jubilee directly addresses questions of social vision, and offers the promise of freedom from bondage BONDAGE. Slavery. , including the bondage of debt. In a context of social realities that are exclusive, it calls for inclusion, and promises a Sabbath rest not only for the people of God, but also for the land, In Leviticus 25, it becomes clear that without a rest for the land, without the seven cycles of fallow land fallow land, cropland that is not seeded for a season; it may or may not be plowed. The land may be cultivated or chemically treated for control of weeds and other pests or may be left unaltered. , there can be no Sabbath for the people of the land.

We can examine how the promises offered in the new biotechnologies stand up to such a vision. Bioprospecting is a practice common among the major biotech bi·o·tech  
n. Informal
Biotechnology.


biotech
Noun

short for biotechnology

Noun 1.
 companies. It identifies the genetic resources of developing nations and indigenous societies, and then files applications for patents on those resources based on the so-called "discovery" of natural products that have been in use for centuries.

Of course, biotech companies need some means of protecting their investment in research and development, but Jubilee provisions set some limits to that: Limits that begin with the assumption that the natural world is available to all, and belongs to none.

Society needs to be specific when it talks about riches and benefits from biotechnology. When companies promise that biotechnology offers food for a hungry world, this is a good thing.

Is it possible that ownership of the genetic resources of the world, concentrated in the hands of a few biotech companies, will improve food distribution?

The present challenge is not food production, but rather food distribution. The green revolution of the seventies and eighties vastly increased the capacity of India to produce food and turned that nation into a net exporter of grain. Yet it has not solved the chronic hunger and malnutrition malnutrition, insufficiency of one or more nutritional elements necessary for health and well-being. Primary malnutrition is caused by the lack of essential foodstuffs—usually vitamins, minerals, or proteins—in the diet.  in that country.

Jubilee is also about sight for the blind -- it has something to say about the truth of our vision of the world around us, about integrity, and transparency. How can we speak of giving sight to the blind when we cannot even see what we are eating because of the resistance to proper labelling?

Jubilee invites us to choose a very particular point of view: one that acknowledges our place in a creation, which is interdependent, an expression of the divine love, and in which each part has a place. Jubilee invites us to a perspective that attends to the hopes and fears of the most vulnerable, the hungry and the landless land·less  
adj.
Owning or having no land.



landless·ness n.

Adj. 1.
, the marginalized and excluded.

It asks us to become sensitive to those who are further excluded because of changes to the structure of agriculture associated with biotechnological change.

The Jubilee invites us neither to be dazzled daz·zle  
v. daz·zled, daz·zling, daz·zles

v.tr.
1. To dim the vision of, especially to blind with intense light.

2.
 by our own technological virtuosity vir·tu·os·i·ty  
n. pl. vir·tu·os·i·ties
1. The technical skill, fluency, or style exhibited by a virtuoso or a composition.

2. An appreciation for or interest in fine objects of art.
, nor to demonize de·mon·ize  
tr.v. de·mon·ized, de·mon·iz·ing, de·mon·iz·es
1. To turn into or as if into a demon.

2. To possess by or as if by a demon.

3.
 what is new and different, but to see it from within the context of the new society that God is at work creating amongst us. We should confront the challenges of biotechnology not with some studied neutrality, or detached objectivity -- the so called view from nowhere -- but with a passionate commitment to see and participate in the redemptive purposes of God in creation.
COPYRIGHT 2001 General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Beresford, Eric
Publication:Anglican Journal
Date:May 1, 2001
Words:581
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