Social Issues Related To Gene Patenting in Latin America

2011 ◽  
pp. 152-170
Author(s):  
Eduardo Rodriguez ◽  
Fernando Lolas

The chapter reports on the experiences of both experts and lay people on the level of knowledge and social representations of genomic research and its applications in a number of Latin American developing countries. Issues discussed include access to prevention and therapeutic methods related to genomic medicine in Latin America, risks associated to genetic modifications in humans, lack of equity in the access to health benefits, control by biotechnological companies, commercialization of gene sequences through patents which leads to commercial exploitation of underdeveloped countries, among others

Diacronia ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sorina-Crina Ghiață

Starting with the independence process of all the territories once colonies and later, overseas territories of the different states of Western Europe, Latin America meant an association of unique paradoxes. Portugal and Spain have dominated in the past, especially from a linguistic and religious perspective,the current space that became avaried cultural environment. In this context, the aim of this study is to capture, in the introductory part, characteristics of the Latin American complex identity(reflected, for example, in the names associated with this space of civilization, in political circumstances and social issues, in particular). In addition, another purpose is to highlight the way in which these aspects are considered in the prose of modern Latin American writers, Rodrigo Rey Rosa and Héctor Abad Faciolince. At the same time,emphasizing the scourge of discrimination or inequality, but especially the perpetual violence, thestudyconcludes with a reference (also found in the literary discourse of the two texts chosen for analysis, Los sordos and El olvido que seremos) to the ethical spirit, but also to the feeling of empathy—subjects approached by both writers—in a world that seems more and more fragmented and depersonalized, as if it has been occupied by a continuous stigma of imbalance.


Author(s):  
Nicole L. Pacino

Scholarship on Latin America’s medical history has traditionally relied on collections located in specific countries that are housed in national and regional archives, universities, medical schools, and government institutions. Digitized source repositories and reference websites will make these materials more accessible for researchers and students, and it is likely that digitized content will become increasingly available in the coming years. In the 21st century, various institutions in Latin America and the United States have made a concerted effort to digitize materials related to the study of health and medicine in Latin America. This effort is the product of advancements in technology that make digital preservation of material possible, as well as a growing awareness that not all archival collections, especially in Latin America, are stored in optimal conditions. The push for digitization, therefore, is centered on two primary goals: first, to make resources more available to researchers and remove obstacles to the use of archival collections, including accessibility and physical distance or travel restrictions, and second, to preserve materials in danger of decay or neglect from storage in subpar conditions. The digitization of a broad array of materials, including historical documents, newspapers, popular culture, photographs, music, and audio recordings, fosters greater use of these collections by researchers, teachers, and students inside and outside of Latin America and enhanced interaction with the institutions that maintain the digital and original collections. While not exhaustive, these sites demonstrate the extensive range of digitized sources available for the study of Latin America’s medical history. Materials span from the pre-Columbian through modern periods; the priority is collections with significant 20th-century content, but those focused on the colonial period and the 19th century are noted. The collections tap into several historiographical themes and discussions prominent in Latin American medical history, including questions about individual agency and the role of the state in administering health and medical initiatives; race, gender, and discriminatory health practices; social issues, such as prostitution and alcoholism, as public health concerns; debates about who can produce medical knowledge; the creation of medical professionalism and medical authority; and Pan-Americanism and the role of United States influence on Latin American health programs. The pace of digitization has been uneven across Latin America. A country’s wealth and access to resources determines the extent to which materials can be digitized, as do political considerations and legislation regarding transparency. Mexico, Brazil, Chile, and Argentina are well represented in the entries, and the collections are either supported by national institutions, such as universities, libraries, or government archives, or sponsored by grants that facilitate the digitization of materials. For example, the collection from Peru relies on a UK-based charitable foundation for its existence. Digital collections based in the United States are located in archival institutions and research centers and focus on the activities of Inter-American, Pan-American, and philanthropic organizations, although not exclusively. Digitized collections greatly improve accessibility to sources related to Latin American medical history, but also depend on the user’s ability to navigate different interfaces and knowledge in how to limit and target searches. Many of the sites allow for keyword searches and the opportunity to browse collections; therefore, a user’s familiarity with the topic, scope, and keywords of a collection will determine the usefulness of search results. Where downloadable material is available, it is provided free of charge, and most of these repositories state a commitment to open access and to growing their digital collections.


Pneuma ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 42 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 477-499
Author(s):  
Néstor Medina

Abstract This article proposes that a new pentecostal social ethic is emerging in the region. Examining recent developments of Pentecostalism in Latin America along with Latin American scholars, I will discuss, in thematic form, some of the recent developments affecting pentecostal movements in the region from revising its historical origins, celebrating its internal diversity, reconsidering political involvement, reclaiming the crucial role of women’s contributions, to developing a social ethics seeking to respond in relevant ways to the social issues confronted by the Latin American population. Though the influence of liberation theology is noticeable, these groups are drawing on the pentecostal experience to reinterpret their relationship with the larger social context and internally. Particular attention is given to the great internal diversity within pentecostal movements in Latin America


2015 ◽  
Vol 45 (6) ◽  
pp. 775-796 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Wade ◽  
Carlos López-Beltrán ◽  
Eduardo Restrepo ◽  
Ricardo Ventura Santos

The articles in this issue highlight contributions that studies of Latin America can make to wider debates about the effects of genomic science on public ideas about race and nation. We argue that current ideas about the power of genomics to transfigure and transform existing ways of thinking about human diversity are often overstated. If a range of social contexts are examined, the effects are uneven. Our data show that genomic knowledge can unsettle and reinforce ideas of nation and race; it can be both banal and highly politicized. In this introduction, we outline concepts of genetic knowledge in society; theories of genetics, nation and race; approaches to public understandings of science; and the Latin American contexts of transnational ideas of nation and race.


Author(s):  
Virginia Rodés ◽  
Adriana Gewerc-Barujel ◽  
Martín Llamas-Nistal

The Open Education movement has made efforts to systematise experiences and to evaluate the adoption of Open Educational Resources (OER). However, OER adoption is not part of the prevailing paradigm in higher education, both at the global level and in Latin America. This paper describes results of a study that analysed the social representations regarding the development, use, and reuse of OER by university teachers in their pedagogical practices. We conducted a study of 12 cases from Latin American universities using data analysis based on Grounded Theory. The results show that the use and reuse of OER lacks of public and institutional policies. The main agents are teachers organised in teams that support OER adoption. The reasons that encourage the creation of OER are mainly intrinsic, such as the pleasure derived from contributing and sharing, as well as external and related to professional development needs from the reflection on one’s own educational practice. Educators consider it essential to evaluate the resources created so that they can be reused in continuous improvement processes. Commercial use and misappropriation of the works are two of the main tensions identified. The community factor of teaching guides most behaviours in OER adoption in educational institutions and is presented as an inherent part of the development and transformation of the curriculum.


Author(s):  
Wendy K. Chung ◽  
Kyle Brothers ◽  
Angela Bradbury ◽  
Sirisak Chanprasert ◽  
Lori Orlando ◽  
...  

Abstract Purpose The PhenX Toolkit (www.phenxtoolkit.org), an online catalog of recommended measurement protocols, facilitates cross-study analyses for research with human participants. The PhenX Steering Committee recommended genomic medicine implementation as a new research domain, with the following scope: genomic knowledge and education (both patients and providers); implementation science; changes in management and treatment; return of results; patient outcomes; and ethical, legal, and social issues (ELSI) associated with genomic research. Methods A seven-member expert Working Group convened in October 2019 to identify well-established measurement protocols for a new genomic medicine implementation domain and used the established PhenX consensus process to select measurement protocols for inclusion in the PhenX Toolkit. Results The Working Group recommended 15 measurement protocols for inclusion in the PhenX Toolkit, with priority given to those with empirical evidence supporting validity. Consortia funded by the National Institutes of Health, and particularly the National Human Genome Research Institute, proved critical in identifying protocols with established utility in this research domain, and identified protocols that were developed through a rigorous process for scope elements that lacked formally validated protocols. Conclusion Use of these protocols, which were released in September 2020, can facilitate standard data collection for genomic medicine implementation research.


2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 527
Author(s):  
Vanina Belén Canavire

Resumen En un contexto de medicalización de la vida cotidiana y disciplinamiento de los cuerpos, se torna apremiante preguntarnos qué ocurre con las percepciones colectivas y las prácticas en salud, particularmente en las poblaciones latinoamericanas con culturas sanitarias ancestrales. En este marco, aquí proponemos el análisis de las representaciones sociales sobre los “itinerarios terapéuticos locales”, desde la mirada disciplinar de la Comunicación Social, en tanto espacio simbólico donde se generan los procesos de producción y circulación de significaciones sociales. Para ello, ponemos a consideración tres argumentos. El primero presenta al subcampo de la Comunicación y Salud, y las problemáticas que allí convergen. Bajo ese arco teórico, abordamos a la Salud intercultural y a la Comunicación para el cambio social como posibles herramientas intelectuales para reflexionar sobre las distintas “maneras de curar”. El segundo argumento refiere a la posibilidad de pensar a los discursos en torno a los conocimientos y recursos terapéuticos tradicionales, como parte del patrimonio cultural intangible de una población. Atendiendo a los conflictos que conllevan los procesos de patrimonialización, es central que se busque abordar los patrimonios locales en toda su complejidad, lejos de miradas escencializantes que hacen de la diversidad una exotización. El tercero plantea la necesidad de indagar en las formas particulares –convivencia, mixtura, invisibilización– que adopta la articulación entre los saberes locales ancestrales y los saberes vinculados a prácticas terapéuticas funcionales a la globalización cultural. Sin dudas, el estudio de los discursos, narrativas y procesos de construcción social de la salud puede revelar uno de los tantos rostros mestizos que delinea la interacción entre lo local y lo global. Mestizo faces: a communication proposal for the study of ancestral therapeutic itineraries in Latin America Abstract In a context of medicalization of daily life and the disciplining of bodies, it becomes urgent to ask what happens with collective perceptions and practices in health, particularly in Latin American populations with ancestral health cultures. In this framework, here we propose the analysis of social representations about "local therapeutic itineraries", from the disciplinary perspective of social communication, as a symbolic space where the processes of production and circulation of social meanings are generated. For this, we put three arguments into consideration. The first presents the subfield of Communication and Health, and the problems that converge there. Under this theoretical framework, we approach Intercultural Health and Communication for social change as possible intellectual tools to reflect on the different "ways of healing". The second argument refers to the possibility of thinking about discourses around traditional knowledge and therapeutic resources, as part of the intangible cultural heritage of a population. Attending to the conflicts that involve the processes of patrimonialization, it is essential to seek to address the local heritage in all its complexity, far from essential looks that make diversity an exoticism. The third raises the need to investigate particular forms –convival, mixture, invisibility– that the articulation between ancestral local knowledge and knowledge linked to functional therapeutic practices to cultural globalization. Undoubtedly, the study of discourses, narratives and processes of social construction of health, can reveal one of the many mestizo faces that delineates the interaction between the local and the global. Rostos mestiços: uma proposta de comunicação para o estudo de itinerários terapêuticos ancestrais na América Latina Em um contexto de medicalização do cotidiano e de disciplinamento dos corpos, torna-se urgente perguntar o que acontece com as percepções e práticas coletivas em saúde, particularmente nas populações latino-americanas com culturas ancestrais de saúde. Nesse contexto, aqui propomos a análise das representações sociais sobre "itinerários terapêuticos locais", a partir da perspectiva disciplinar da Comunicação Social, como um espaço simbólico onde são gerados os processos de produção e circulação de significados sociais. Para isso, colocamos três argumentos em consideração. A primeira apresenta o subcampo de Comunicação e Saúde e os problemas que convergem para lá. Sob este referencial teórico, abordamos a Saúde Intercultural e a Comunicação para a mudança social como possíveis ferramentas intelectuais para refletir sobre as diferentes "formas de cura". O segundo argumento refere-se à possibilidade de se pensar discursos em torno de conhecimentos tradicionais e recursos terapêuticos, como parte do patrimônio cultural intangível de uma população. Atendendo aos conflitos que envolvem os processos de patrimonialização, é essencial buscar abordar o patrimônio local em toda a sua complexidade, longe de olhares essenciais que fazem da diversidade um exotismo. A terceira suscita a necessidade de investigar formas particulares - conciliação, mistura, invisibilidade - que adota a articulação entre conhecimento local ancestral e conhecimento vinculado às práticas terapêuticas funcionais à globalização cultural. Sem dúvida, o estudo de discursos, narrativas e processos de construção social da saúde pode revelar uma das muitas faces mestiças que delineiam a interação entre o local e o global.


Author(s):  
Mary A. Clark ◽  
Amy Patterson

This commentary focuses on Latin America, a region known for its rich variety of populist politicians and some of the most extensive welfare states in the Global South. Contemporary Latin America offers examples of left-wing and right-wing populist leaders, none of whom demonstrate the same focus on excluding immigrants from welfare state benefits as that noted by Chiari Rinaldi and Marleen Bekker in the European context. We see this contrast not because immigrants’ access to health services is less important in Latin America, but because Latin American populists are more focused on internal "enemies." The commentary concludes with observations regarding Latin American populist leaders’ handling of the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic.


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 537-557 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia Alves Brasil ◽  
Rosa Cabecinhas

Social representations of history play an important role in defining the identity of national and supranational groups such as Latin America, and also influencing present-day intergroup relations. In this paper, we discuss a study that aimed to analyse and compare social representations of Latin American history among Brazilian, Chilean, and Mexican participants. We conducted a survey with 213 university students, aged 18 to 35 years old, from these three countries, through an online questionnaire with open-ended questions about important events and people in the region's history. Despite the reference to different historical events and the existence of national specificities, several common topics were noteworthy across the three samples. There was a centrality of events involving political issues, conflicts and revolutions, as well as a recency effect and a sociocentric bias, replicating previous research about social representations of world history in different countries. There was also a strong prominence of colonization and independence issues in all samples. Through an emphasis on a common narrative of struggle and overcoming difficulties, the participants’ social representations of Latin American history may favour mobilization and resistance, challenging the stability and legitimacy of the existing social order. Furthermore, the findings are discussed in terms of their potential connections with present-day intergroup relations within Latin America, and between Latin America and other parts of the world.


2012 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agustín Escobar Latapi

Although the migration – development nexus is widely recognized as a complex one, it is generally thought that there is a relationship between poverty and emigration, and that remittances lessen inequality. On the basis of Latin American and Mexican data, this chapter intends to show that for Mexico, the exchange of migrants for remittances is among the lowest in Latin America, that extreme poor Mexicans don't migrate although the moderately poor do, that remittances have a small, non-significant impact on the most widely used inequality index of all households and a very large one on the inequality index of remittance-receiving households, and finally that, to Mexican households, the opportunity cost of international migration is higher than remittance income. In summary, there is a relationship between poverty and migration (and vice versa), but this relationship is far from linear, and in some respects may be a perverse one for Mexico and for Mexican households.


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