Dwai Banerjee, Dartmouth College

Wednesday, December 16

4pm – E51-095

“Markets and molecules: biopharmaceutical rights in the global south”

The Indian pharmaceutical industry has historically manufactured low-cost drugs 
for the global poor.  In this talk, I show how as new drug access controversies 
in India focus on biopharmaceutical therapies, they reveal new flows of 
international capital, emergent genetic technologies, and increasingly coercive 
trade regimes that together favor multi-national corporate oligopolies.  In 
turn, the rise of such oligopolies imperils the future availability of 
essential life-saving drugs for the work of global public health.  My aim here 
is to demonstrate how the future of the right to drug access rests uneasily, 
and potentially calamitously, in a shifting balance of power between global 
south interests and Euro-American pharmaceutical capital.

BIO: Dwaipayan Banerjee holds a Ph.D from the Department of Anthropology at NYU 
and is currently a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at Dartmouth College.  His book 
manuscript - Keeping Time: Cancer and Pain in Contemporary India - concerns the 
political life of cancer in the public health world.  His research interests 
include the politics of health, science and technology in the global south.



____________________________________________
Gus Zahariadis
Assistant to the Director
Program in Science, Technology, and Society

T: (617) 253-3452
F: (617) 258-8118




Attachment: smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature

_______________________________________________
Sci-tech-public mailing list
Sci-tech-public@mit.edu
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/sci-tech-public

Reply via email to