STS Circle at Harvard
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Erik Aarden
Harvard, STS

on
Distributing Genetic Medicine: The Politics of Health Care Access in Western 
Europe.
Monday, October 1
12:15-2:00 p.m.
Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street, Room 100F

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Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to 
sts<mailto:[email protected]>@hks.harvard.edu<mailto:[email protected]> 
by 5pm Today, September 26.

Abstract: The question, who can have access to genetic diagnostics in Western 
Europe, plays out against the background of an alleged ‘genetic revolution’ in 
medicine and reforms considered to take health care delivery away from 
traditional (welfare) state arrangements. However, the implications of the 
‘genetic revolution’ and institutional reforms in health care are usually 
studied as separate domains, even though it is in the interaction between them 
that the most significant changes for the future of European welfare states 
occur. In my presentation I will therefore investigate how medical applications 
of genetic technologies and the structures within which they are provided are 
co-produced. I will discuss examples of how different European cultures 
integrate genetic diagnostic technologies in their health care provision 
schemes, thereby producing nationally specific patterns of distributing genetic 
medicine. I will argue that these patterns contribute to the creation of 
culturally specific forms of social citizenship that are significant for the 
public provision of health care in the genetic age.

Biography: Erik Aarden is a Marie Curie Fellow with the Program on Science, 
Technology, and Society at Harvard University. Erik received his PhD at 
Maastricht University (The Netherlands) for a comparative study of the 
incorporation of genetic technologies in public health care provision in 
Germany, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom in 2010. In his current 
research project, he investigates the global politics of medical population 
research. His case studies include several cohort-based studies and 
infrastructures, including genetic biobanks, in various places around the 
globe. Before his current project, he was engaged in several (European) 
research projects at the intersection of science, technology, and society at 
Maastricht University, as well as in the establishment of a department for 
Futures Studies at RWTH Aachen University in Germany.





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