Abstract

Molecular genomics have revolutionized the dairy cattle breeding industry in recent years. Genomic technologies, seen as capable for solving challenges ranging from farm viability to animal health and sustainability, have restructured dairy breeding networks and markets globally and transformed relationships between humans, non-human animals, and technologies. Furthermore, they have created possibilities for increased commercialization and appropriation of breeding practices and the intensified objectification and machination of animals. In this paper I combine the theories of market creation and commodification to understand how the ‘genomic market’ was created in Finnish dairy cattle breeding and examine the repercussions of this development within dairy production more broadly. By drawing on textual and interview data by breeding companies and cattle owners, I explore how genomic knowledge becomes stabilized and objectified as a commodity. I also examine how cattle owners and cattle become requalified as actors within this market and how they co-produce and contest the process in significant ways. My results indicate that the commodification of genomic knowledge contributes to a powerful reinterpretation of Finnish dairy production and can have important moral and material repercussions for human and non-human animal lives within those networks.

Highlights

  • In this paper I set out to examine the processes of creating markets for new technologies and commodifying bovine genomic knowledge

  • This paper provides a localized perspective on the mechanisms of market creation and genomic commodification in the Finnish breeding networks

  • In this paper I set out to examine how genomic knowledge emerged as a market object in the context of Finnish dairy breeding, and how the Finnish dairy farm was reinterpreted in this process

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Summary

Introduction

In this paper I set out to examine the processes of creating markets for new technologies and commodifying bovine genomic knowledge. I explore this issue by focusing on the emergence of genomic knowledge as a market object in the Finnish dairy cattle breeding market. The empirical focus of this paper is on the Finnish market leader, a breeding co-op, and I use content and discourse analysis inspired by actor network theory to symmetrically examine the role of both human and non-human actors in the process of commodifying genomic knowledge. Inspired by the theory of market creation, I explore how these processes rest upon building new relations – detachments and attachments – between actors in Finnish breeding networks. I ask what repercussions this work has for the knowledge practices and both human and non-human actors on the farm, and how they are re-enacted by and contest the new relations on the market

Studying the commodification of genomic life
Genomic knowledge on the Finnish breeding markets: the case and its scrutiny
Commodifying genomic knowledge
Controlling contestation
Making invisible cattle
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
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