STS Circle at Harvard
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Kaushik Sunder Rajan
Chicago, Anthropology

on
The Scandal of the Trial: HPV Vaccines, Public Health, and Knowledge / Value


Monday, April 29
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 Wednesday, April 24.

Abstract:

In early April 2010, the Indian Council for Medical Research (ICMR) halted a 
project that involved the experimental administration of Gardasil, a vaccine 
developed by Merck used to prevent human papilloma virus (HPV) infection, in 
Bhadrachalam, in the Indian state of Andhra Pradesh. The study was shut down 
because of apparent reports of violations of ethical guidelines. An immediate 
focal point of controversy was that Bhadrachalam is a predominantly tribal 
area, and questions were asked about conducting a study on tribal girls. This 
controversy developed into a full-blown controversy in its own right, but has 
also become the focal point of emergent civil society advocacy in India against 
unethical clinical trials.



I describe this controversy as an entry point into a broader consideration of 
the politics around pharmaceuticals and health in India today. How do these 
politics emerge in relation to global logics of biocapital? In what ways does 
public health get conscripted into, and changed in the process of, 
articulations with these global logics? What kinds of experimental subjectivity 
get produced as a consequence? I argue that what is at stake here is the 
re-theorization of knowledge, of value, and of the nature of their 
articulation, and the necessity of asking questions of the ethical and the 
political in the light of such re-theorizations.



Biography: Kaushik Sunder Rajan is Associate Professor of Anthropology and of 
Social Sciences at the University of Chicago. He was initially trained as a 
biologist, obtained his PhD in the History and Social Studies of Science and 
Technology at MIT, and works on the anthropology of science, technology and 
medicine. His work has focused on a number of interrelated events and 
emergences: firstly, the increased corporatization of life science research; 
secondly, the emergence of new technologies and epistemologies within the life 
sciences, such as, significantly, genomics; and thirdly, the fact that these 
technoscientific and market emergences were not simply occurring in the United 
States, but rather globally. His book, Biocapital: The Constitution of 
Post-Genomic Life, tries to capture a flavor of these emergences. On the one 
hand, it is a multi-sited ethnography of emergent genomic research and drug 
development marketplaces in the United States and India. On the other hand, it 
traces the historical emergence of what he calls biocapital in the late 20th 
century, and interrogates the nature and manner of the co-production of 
economic and epistemic value in the life sciences today. Sunder Rajan is 
currently researching the political economy of pharmaceutical development in 
India in the context of changes in global capital flows and governance regimes.



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