Abstract

The application of genome editing to animal research connects to a wide variety of policy concerns and public conversations. We suggest focusing narrowly on public opinion of genome editing is to overlook the range of positions from which people are brought into relationships with animal research through these technologies. In this paper, we explore three key roles that publics are playing in the development of genome editing techniques applied to animals in biomedical research. First, publics are positioned by surveys and focus groups as stakeholders with opinions that matter to the development of research technologies. Learning lessons from controversies over genetically modified food in Europe, these methods are used to identify problems in science–society relations that need to be managed. Second, people are recruited into research projects through participating in biobanks and providing data, where their contributions are encouraged by appeals to the public good and maintained by public confidence. Thirdly, patients are increasingly taking positions within research governance, as lay reviewers on funding panels, where their expertise helps align research priorities and practices with public expectations of research. These plural publics do not easily aggregate into a simple or singular public opinion on genome editing. We conclude by suggesting more attention is needed to the multiple roles that different publics expect – and are expected – to play in the future development of genomic technologies.

Highlights

  • The application of genome editing to animal research connects a surprisingly diverse set of policy concerns and public conversations

  • Initial plans to do research using genome editing techniques could be reviewed by a patient volunteer sitting on a funding panel, who is attuned to the public priorities and purpose of the research

  • The different publics and qualities of ‘publicness’[62] outlined above are useful for considering why, how and when to involve publics in discussions about the application of genome editing to animal research. They help describe why diverse public views do not aggregate into a picture of what the public thinks about genome editing and explain how contradictory societal perspectives emerge from everyday experiences

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Summary

Introduction

The application of genome editing to animal research connects a surprisingly diverse set of policy concerns and public conversations.

Results
Conclusion
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