Nanotechnology, Ethics and Policy
Journal of Business Ethics, Special Issue
Nanotechnology involves the manipulation of materials at an atomic level to produce new products and services. Governments and entrepreneurs in many countries have seized nanotechnologies as the next technology-base to offer the potential of great economics and societal benefits. However, the specter of the dark side of nanotechnology is already apparent both in fictional accounts such as the book Predator and in real occurrences such as the death of two workers in a Chinese factory in 2009.
Nanotechnologies are unusual in many ways. They hold the promise of changing many products across a wide range of industries. Both developed economies that have pioneered technological advances over the last century and emerging economies in Asia and
While talk has begun in many jurisdictions about regulation and policy to ensure that nanotechnologies are tested, developed and used in an ethical manner, the field is still young and undeveloped. Consequently, a special issue on Nanotechnology, Policy and Ethics is being produced in the Journal of Business Ethics.
The intent is to bridge and develop discussions that are already going on in Universities and Policy Circles through the provision of an open forum - a special issue. This special issue is seen as especially relevant for those in the field of: Ethics, Policy, Entrepreneurship, Emerging Technologies, Economic Development, Materials Science, Environmental Management, and R&D.
This special issue is interested in a wide range of papers including work that provides tools and information to assist policy makers, entrepreneurs, business professionals and technologist in making difficult policy, commercial and technological decisions. Quantitative, qualitative and case-based research provides the potential for important insights into this field. Consequently, a wide array of approaches to research are welcome as they may assist in the identification of next practices rather than identifying best current practice.
While the focus of this special issue is on Nanotechnologies, papers that consider the broader implications of emerging technologies, perception versus reality, stakeholder concerns, competition between jurisdictions that place economic over ethical considerations, and policy making in the face of uncertainty are welcome as they will not only benefit the ethical questions relating to Nanotechnologies, but technology more broadly.
Submissions are due to the editors on November 1,
Key Dates:
April 30, 2010 Abstract Submission for COMS
August 15, 2010: Submission of full papers
November, 2010: End of the first review process
Contacts:
Jonathan D. Linton
Power Corporation Professor for the
Management of Technological
Editor-in-Chief Technovation
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Steven T. Walsh
Black Professor of Entrepreneurship
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