European Biotechnology and Society Online Seminar Series 2020
We have now reached the end of the European Biotechnology and Society Online Seminar Series, convened by the ERA Cofund on Biotechnology. Over the course of six weeks (from 30.09. – 04.11. 2020) and six seminars, we were privileged to hear presentations from 12 groups of speakers and one discussant with diverse perspectives: scientists, philosophers, research funders, and social or interdisciplinary researchers. Speakers shared their practical and conceptual work on social, environmental, political and ethical dimensions of biotechnology in Europe. We were also delighted that each week more than 40 audience members joined us – and well over 60 on some occasions. Over the series there were over 200 unique registrants from 29 countries from Europe and beyond. Thank you for your participation!
We kept to a tight one-hour schedule to allow maximum attendance, but there were still opportunities for audience input and discussion between speakers. Interesting challenges and tensions in enacting responsible research and innovation (RRI) often emerged in discussions, including: What does it mean to innovate responsibly? How can RRI be adequately funded and supported? Whose responsibility is RRI? Should we even talk about “RRI” - is it a helpful term? And how do we innovate responsibly when many systems incentivise irresponsibility? Early feedback suggests that the audience valued the format, the variety of speakers, and the discussion sessions. We will continue to review feedback and communicate what we have learned from the series. We are also considering how this series might continue in the future.
Speakers, topics and materials
Wednesday 30th September - Seminar materials:
- Diverse routes to dissemination and engagement in MeMBrane. – Alan Goddard (Aston University)
- Breaking the impasse: Towards a forward‐looking governance framework for gene editing with plants. – Phil Macnaghten (Wageningen University) and Michelle Habets (Rathenau Instituut)
Wednesday 7th October
- Provenance Assessment as a method for integrating RRI into the research process. – Alfred Nordmann and Janine Gondolf (TU Darmstadt)
- Responsible innovation and transformative innovation policy as frameworks for research funding policy – Cecilie Mathiesen, Øystein Rønning and Helge Rynning (Norwegian Research Council)
Wednesday 14th October
- RRI in CoBioTech: Challenges and opportunities of using Lego Serious Play. – Eleanor Hadley Kershaw (University of Nottingham), Stevienna de Saille (University of Sheffield) and Carmen McLeod (University of Newcastle)
- “What are we talking about? Understanding how context matters for assessing biotech innovations in agriculture” - Amy Clare & Ruth Müller (Munich Center for Technology in Society,TU Munich)
- Presentation available upon request (please contact the speakers)
- Public Imaginations of Genome Editing in Livestock
Wednesday 21st October
- Sustainable Co-Production: stakeholders and knowledgeholders. – Ursula Weisenfeld, Cristina Blohm and Antoniya Hauerwaas (Leuphana University of Lüneberg)
- Responsible innovation in the Centre for Digital Life, Norway. – Trygve Brautaset (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
The Walkshop Approach to Science and Technology Ethics (https://digitallifenorway.org/media/fm/c1a11c6288.pdf )
Wednesday 28th October
- An ethnographic approach to assess the social impact of a biotechnological intervention in wine: methodological considerations and a pint of results from CoolWine. – Mabel Gracia Arnaiz, Veronica Anzil and Lina Casadó (Universitat Rovira i Virgili)
- Opening up plant synthetic biology. – Jim Haseloff (University of Cambridge)
Wednesday 4th November
- Implementing RRI: integrating life cycle analysis & stakeholder engagement. – Eva Sevigné-Itoiz, Lorenzo Di Lucia, Onesmus Mwabonje and Jeremy Woods (Imperial College London)
- Navigating controversy and responsibility in industrial synthetic biology: the cases of Evolva and Ecover– Lotte Asveld (TU Delft)
- Discussant – Michael Bernstein (Arizona State University)
Reviews
Jonathan Hankins in collaboration with the Fondazione Giannino Bassetti, attended the European Biotechnology and Society Online Seminar Series and published a review on the series in two parts.
Follow the links below to find the reviews and learn more about the content of each seminar session.
European Biotechnology and Society Online Seminar Series - Review, Part 1
European Biotechnology and Society Online Seminar Series - Review, Part 2
Agency for Renewable Resources (FNR) Germany
Consultant EU/International Department
Responsible for BioTech Hub Workshops and Status Seminars in ERA CoBioTech

The University of Edinburgh, UK
Research Fellow, Social Dimensions of Synthetic Biology
Science Technology and Innovation Studies, School of Social and Political Science

The University of Edinburgh, UK
Research Assistant, Building Capacity for Resonsible Innovation in International Biotechnology Policy Organisations
Science Technology and Innovation Studies, School of Social and Political Science
Durham University, UK
Dr Zara Thokozani (Thoko) Kamwendo
Postdoctoral Research Associate
St John’s College, Durham University

ERA CoBioTech has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 722361.
