Biotechnology: The University Industrial Complex

Author:   Martin Kenney
Publisher:   Yale University Press
Edition:   New edition
ISBN:  

9780300042092


Pages:   310
Publication Date:   10 September 1988
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Biotechnology: The University Industrial Complex


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Overview

In the first serious history of the biotechnology industry, Martin Kenney examines its growth and structure, describes the role of university departments of basic and applied biology, and shows how the relationship undermines the educational role of the university. ""Kenney’s work is the first major effort to provide a detailed analysis of the birth of the new industrial field of biotechnology and its impact on universities. . . . Kenney’s book abounds in rich description and valuable conjectures. It also provides important insights into the structural and institutional aspects of the biotechnological revolution. It is informed by an extensive literature including reports form the financial community, university-industry contracts, trade journals, personal interviews, and company prospectuses.""—Sheldon Krimsky, American Scientist ""A fine description of a vital new field. It deserves wide readership.""—David Silbert and Duncan Newhauser, New England Journal of Medicine ""The author raises important questions about whether the character of this university-industrial complex adequately allows for the kind of public discussion and participation necessary to insure consideration of social, economic, and moral issues in the development of this important new technology.""—Harvard Educational Review ""Bears upon questions of fundamental importance to science, academia, and society and provides valuable documentation of the magnitude of the actions already taken and the multitude of participants involved.""—Robert L. Sinsheimer, Nature

Full Product Details

Author:   Martin Kenney
Publisher:   Yale University Press
Imprint:   Yale University Press
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 0.20cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.526kg
ISBN:  

9780300042092


ISBN 10:   0300042094
Pages:   310
Publication Date:   10 September 1988
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

A careful and penetrating piece of scholarship that makes an important contribution to the study of social and economic institutions. -Sheldon Krimsky, Tufts University A careful and penetrating piece of scholarship that makes an important contribution to the study of social and economic institutions. -Sheldon Krimsky, Tufts University Here is a dispassionate discussion of biotechnology-its beginnings and where it may lead. Dr. Kenney's analysis of the interrelations between corporate and university forces is thoughtful and comprehensive. The book, which may serve as a reference text, should provide the basis for the socioeconomic debate that will inevitably intensify with time. -Liebe F. Cavalieri, Sloan-Kettering Institute Here is a dispassionate discussion of biotechnology-its beginnings and where it may lead. Dr. Kenney's analysis of the interrelations between corporate and university forces is thoughtful and comprehensive. The book, which may serve as a reference text, should provide the basis for the socioeconomic debate that will inevitably intensify with time. -Liebe F. Cavalieri, Sloan-Kettering Institute


A careful and penetrating piece of scholarship that makes an important contribution to the study of social and economic institutions. -Sheldon Krimsky, Tufts University A careful and penetrating piece of scholarship that makes an important contribution to the study of social and economic institutions. -Sheldon Krimsky, Tufts University Here is a dispassionate discussion of biotechnology-its beginnings and where it may lead. Dr. Kenney's analysis of the interrelations between corporate and university forces is thoughtful and comprehensive. The book, which may serve as a reference text, should provide the basis for the socioeconomic debate that will inevitably intensify with time. -Liebe F. Cavalieri, Sloan-Kettering Institute Here is a dispassionate discussion of biotechnology-its beginnings and where it may lead. Dr. Kenney's analysis of the interrelations between corporate and university forces is thoughtful and comprehensive. The book, which may serve as a reference text, should provide the basis for the socioeconomic debate that will inevitably intensify with time. -Liebe F. Cavalieri, Sloan-Kettering Institute


A measured appraisal of the key role played by universities in the emergence of a US biotechnology industry (which has attracted $3 billion in venture capital in the past decade). Kenney (agricultural economics/Ohio State) also examines important issues raised by the increasing involvement of educational institutions in commercial enterprises. The productive employment of microorganisms and biological processes dates back to 6000 B.C. when the Babylonians fermented a kind of beer. But Kenney's focus is on the techniques with applications potential in agricultural, health care and the other mass markets that have emerged since the 1970's, primarily as a result of the 1953 discovery of DNA. He also reviews the wealth of ways in which the rush to exploit biotech has altered the character of research departments at universities and allied institutions. Among others, he probes the $70-million contract that binds Massachusetts General Hospital to Hoechst A.G., a West German multinational. Covered as well are instances in which attractive financial inducements have been used to recruit talented professors for start-up firms that aggressive Wall Streeters hope to take public. Kenney maintains that the campus/corporate connection is a risky business on several counts. For one, power of the purse allows sponsors to set the R&D agenda to programs promising near. term payouts; thus, some Faustian bargains have been struck with basic research the loser. Too, there's the good chance that chronically needy universities and faculty might be co-opted if not corrupted by industry. Kenney's dispassionate text will not put a conclusive end to the curiously muted debate now in progress, but it represents a valuable contribution to these vital proceedings. (Kirkus Reviews)


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