Introduction:
Friday, August 5th, 2022
09h30: welcome and introduction
09h40: Hanganu-Bresch Cristina, St. Joseph’s University, United States, Associate Professor, Science and technology studies
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Food biopolitics: healthism and orthorexia
10h00: Staunton Ciara, Middlesex University, United Kingdom, Senior Lecturer in Law, Law
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The Regulation of embryonic stem cell research in Ireland: Developments since the Commission on Assisted Human Reproduction
10h20: Saylor Katherine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, United States, PhD Student,
Bioethics – Medical Ethics
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Beyond maximizing health outcomes: Incorporating fairness into priority setting for genetic screening
10h40: Kennedy Susan, Boston University, United States, PhD Candidate, Philosophy
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From Procreation to Parenthood – Simply a Matter of Convention?
11h00-11h15 – Coffee break
11h20: Kandhari Rohini, New-Delhi, India, Independent Researcher, Anthropology
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Bio-Consumption: Stem Cell Treatments in India and the Making of A New Experimental Subject Population
11h40: Hendlin Yogi, Erasmus University Rotterdam/UCSF, The Netherlands, Assistant Professor,
Research Associate, Political Science
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Industrial Epidemics: Chronic Disease and the Corporate Determinants of Health
12h00: Comfort Nathaniel, Johns Hopkins University, United States, Professor of History of
Medicine, History of Medicine
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The Nature and Nurture of James D. Watson
12h30-13h30 – Group picture & buffet lunch served by Brocher Foundation
13h30: Branagan Lesley, currently unaffiliated (finished PhD in 2019), Australia, Dr., Anthropology
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Mental health in south India: The ‘medicine and prayer’ healing model
13h50: Bisaillon Laura, University of Toronto, Canada, Dr. Professor, Sociology
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Medications, Mobilities and Memories: Ethnographic Inquiries at the Medico-Legal Borderlands
14h10: Akintola Simisola, University of Ibadan, Nigeria, Professor of Law and Bioethics, Bioethics –
Medical ethics
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An Indegenous legal approach to regulating data sharing in Genomic and Biobank research in resource limited settings: perspectives from Nigeria
14h30 – end of presentations