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Subject: New Book: The Corporate Take over of Science
Date: Mon, 29 Jan 2001 08:25:30 -0600 (CST)
From: MichaelP <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: ?
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Dr. Mae-Wan Ho
Director
Institute of Science in Society
The October Gallery
24 Old Gloucester St.
London WC1N 3AL
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

ISIS Book Brief
26 Jan. 2001

The Corporate Take over of Science

Captive State: The Corporate Takeover of Britain by George Monbiot,
MacMillan, London, 2000.
 Review  by Mae-Wan Ho, Ph.D.

The corporate take over is here and threatening the foundations of
democratic government. That is the message of George Monbiot's explosive and
important book Corporations have seized control of our hospitals, schools
and universities. They have infiltrated the government and come to dominate
government ministries, buying and selling planning permission, dispensing
our tax money to research and development that benefit industry, taking over
the food chain. To top it all, the British Government has colluded in ceding
its power to international institutions controlled by corporations, such as
the World Trade Organization, the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund. Anyone who is under the delusion that corrupt or corrupted governments
are only in the Third World has better think again.

The chapter on corporate takeover of universities is too close to home. I
have been on the permanent academic staff of the Open University since 1976,
but was strongly encouraged to take early retirement last June as I became
more and more involved in the genetic engineering debate.

In the course of the genetic engineering debate, I had begun to realise that
the corporate takeover of science was the greatest threat to democracy and
to the survival of our planet [1]. That was why I co-founded the
not-for-profit Institute of Science in Society (ISIS) to work for social
responsibility and sustainable approaches in science and the integration of
science in society. As part of the agreement for my retirement, I was to be
given an honorary secondment, so I could continue running ISIS from the
University, while making it clear it was independent from the University.
The situation soon began to rapidly deteriorate, however.

In August, less than two months after my retirement, my research assistant
and I were both officially banned from the University campus. Huntingdon
Life Sciences  (HLS) alleged in a letter and phone-call to my head of
Department that I was in possession of certain internal papers belonging to
them. Huntingdon Life Sciences is a privately-owned laboratory, at the time
doing contract research for the biotech companies, among them Imutran, a
subsidiary of the corporate-giant Novartis.

The University made no attempt to communicate with me or with my assistant
before imposing the ban. Had they done so, they would have found that HLS'
accusation was false. I was sent some papers by a group campaigning for
animal welfare, who were helping me obtain published scientific papers on
cross-species organ transplant  - the experiments being carried out in HLS
for Imutran - so that ISIS could prepare a scientific critique, which we did
[2]. The internal papers were never used and have been destroyed since, as I
judged that there was enough in the scientific literature to damn the whole
project on safety and moral grounds.

But the chief of HLS, Brian Cass, tried to intimidate me, in phone calls,
and in an e-mail, to get me to reveal the identity of the campaigning group.
I refused to do so.

When I went on campus to prepare my reply to the ban, the Sub-Dean of
Science came into my office and threatened to have me removed physically
with the security guard.

After days on the telephone to my Union representative, the Dean of Science
agreed to see me. Months later, the ban was lifted for myself, but my for my
assistant; the University denied that she had, in fact, been given an
honorary research fellowship a year earlier. I was further barred from using
University facilities for ISIS.

The animal welfare group, Uncaged Campaigns, has gone public since with a
150 page report leaked to the press, documenting excessive suffering of
animals at HLS, and Imutran's exaggeration of the success of the pig to
primate organ transplant research. Imutran has brought an injunction against
Uncaged Campaigns to prevent the release of the report. But just four days
after the news broke, Novartis announced the closure of Imutran, and the
removal of the research to the United States. Nevertheless, Novartis has
pursued the case against Uncaged Campaigns to full trial and won. Since then
there has been a plethora of prominent articles in the mainstream press
condemning animal rights activists and defending Huntingdon Life Sciences.

George Monbiot gives many more examples of similar treatments the University
administrations mete out to academics daring to dissent from the corporate
agenda or to criticise it. The Centre for Human Ecology, started by
distinguished evolutionist and geneticist C.H. Waddington more than 30 years
ago, was hounded out of Edinburgh University in 1996, essentially for
raising questions in both the scientific and popular press about the
Conservative Government's science policies. Academic and government
scientists are all too often asked to falsify data in order not to offend
corporate funders.

"Today, there is scarcely a science faculty in the United Kingdom whose
academic freedom has not been compromised by its funding arrangements.
Contact between government-funded researchers and industry, having once been
discouraged, is now, in many departments, effectively compulsory..our
universities have been offered for sale, with the result that objectivity
and intellectual honesty are becoming surplus to requirements."

The sell-out began under the Conservative Government, and with science
research funding which effectively controls what kinds of science would be
done. The 1993 white paper on science called Realizing our Potential,
intended to "produce a better match between publicly funded strategic
research and the needs of industry". The research councils, which distribute
most of the public money for science would be obliged to develop "more
extensive and deeper links" with industry. They would be required "to
recruit more of their senior staff from industry".

The Labour government extended those reforms enthusiastically. Its 1998
white paper on competitiveness launched a 'reach-out' fund to encourage
universities to "work more effectively with business". The role of the
higher education funding councils, which provide the core money for
universities, was redefined " to ensure that higher education is responsive
to the needs of business and industry".

Thus, it comes as no surprise that the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences
Research council (BBSRC), the main funding body for Britain's academic
biologists with an annual budget of £190m, is chaired by Peter Doyle, an
executive director of the biotech corporation, Zeneca. Among the members of
its council are the Chief Executive of the pharmaceutical firm Chiroscience,
the former Director of Research and Development of the food company Nestle;
the President of the Food and Drink Federation; the general manager of
Britain's biggest farming business and a consultant to the biochemical
industry.  The BBSRC's strategy board contains executives from SmithKline
Beecham, Merck Sharpe and Dohme and Agrevo UK (now subsidiary of Aventis,
the company responsible for getting the Department of Environment, Transport
and the Regions (DETR) to support the controversial 'farmscale' field trials
with £3 million of taxpayer's money). The Council has seven specialist
committees, each overseeing the funding of different branches of biology.
Employees of Zeneca sit on all of them.

The BBSRC was established in 1994 to replace the biological program
previously run by the Science and Engineering Research Council (SERC).
Whereas SERC's mandate was to advance science of all kinds. The BBSRC's
purpose is "to sustain a broad base of interdisciplinary research and
training to help industry, commerce and Government create wealth".

The BBSRC's press release falls into three categories: news about the
research grants it allocates, news about the findings resulting from those
grants, and fierce attacks on critics of genetic engineering. Arpad Pusztai'
s publication in The Lancet was condemned as "irresponsible". When Friends
of the Earth released the results of research showing that GM oilseed rape
pollen was being carried four and a half kilometres (well beyond the legal
'isolation distances'), the BBSRC issued a statement that the finding was "a
distraction from the key issues".

Gene biotechnology research is swallowing up the lion's share of the
research funds. In January 1999, the BBSRC set aside £15m for "a new
initiative to help British researchers win the race to identify the function
of key genes". In July the same year, £19m was to be spent on new research
facilities to "underpin the economic and environmental sustainability of
agriculture in the UK" through "work on genetically modified crops". In
October, £11m were allocated to projects that would enable the UK "to remain
internationally competitive in the deveopment of gene-based technologies".
Every year, the Council gives more than £10m in grants to John Innes Centre
in Norwich, the genetic engineering institute which houses the Sainsbury
Laboratory and has a research alliance with Zeneca and Dupont.

The BBSRC also funds the secondment of academics into corporations to
"influence basic research relevant to company objectives". The Council
launched a Biotechnology Young Entrepreneurs Scheme, "aimed at encouraging a
more entrepreneurial attitude in bioscientists". It has paid for researcher
to work for Nestle, Unilever, Glaxo Wellcome, SmithKline Beecham, AgrEvo,
Dupont, Rhone Poulenc and Zeneca.

Most telling of all, scientists working in university departments receiving
BBSRC grants are formally gagged to prevent them becoming "involved in
political controversy in matters affecting research in biotechnology and
biological sciences". In practice, however, scientists can hype
biotechnology to their heart's content. The gagging is strictly aimed at
critics.

The same pattern of corporate takeover is repeated in the other research
councils, the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and the Medical
Research Council (MRC).

I recently visited the MRC website and found that an extra £1.9 billion is
to be committed to "health genomics research" over the next five years [3].
That is in addition to the Government's projected spending of £675m on
university infrastructure through the Science Research Investment Fund,
which includes high tech facilities for studying genes and proteins.

A number of the MRC proposals are controversial to say the least (see "MRC
proposes human experiments in GM foods", and "UK population DNA database to
be established" ISIS press releases www.i-sis.org/press.shtml

George has confirmed what many people already suspect and experienced in
their personal struggles for freedom and democracy in different spheres of
life. What can we do in the face of the ever-increasing consolidation of
corporate control? Monbiot has only one answer: don't despair, fight on!

"The struggle between people and corporations will be the defining battle of
the twenty-first century. If the corporations win, liberal democracy will
come to an end. The great social democratic institutions which have defended
the weak against the strong - equality before the law, representative
government, democratic accountability and the sovereignty of parliament -
will be toppled. If, on the other hand, the corporate attempt on public life
is beaten back, then democracy may re-emerge the stronger for its conquest.
But this victory cannot be brokered by our representatives. Democracy will
survive only if the people in whose name they govern rescue the state from
its captivity."

This book is meticulously researched and scholarly, but despite the
seriousness of the subject matter, it is refreshingly well written. The
style of the prose is pleasantly evocative, light and engaging, even when
his message is at its most uncompromisingly radical.

1. Genetic Engineering Dream or Nightmare? Turning the Tide on the Brave New
World of Bad Science and Big Business, by Mae-Wan Ho, Gateway Gill&
Macmillan, 1998, 2nd ed., 1999.
2. Xenotransplantation: How bad science and big business put the world at
risk from viral pandemic. ISIS Sustainable Science Audit #2,
www.i-sis.org/xeno.shtml
3. "MRC SCIENCE BUDGET ALLOCATION ENABLES FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OF HEALTH
GENOMICS RESEARCH" MRC Press Release MRC/69/000, 22 November www.mrc.ac.uk

Dr. Mae-Wan Ho
Director
Institute of Science in Society
The October Gallery
24 Old Gloucester St.
London WC1N 3AL
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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