De Lange Conference XIII

Friday, February 9, 2024 | 8:00 a.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Delange-2024-graphic_A.pdf

Additional dates:

Completed Event: February 10, 2024 Conference Series Launch on Jan. 23 and 24, 2024

Brave New Worlds: Who Decides?
Research, Risk, and Responsibility

Nearly 50 years ago, a group of the world’s leading scientists — a generation that grew up in the shadow of the atomic bomb — came together to discuss the ethics and safety of the newly emerging field of genetic engineering at a time when little was known about the potential hazards of this promising new technique. This “Asilomar” meeting, as it became known, was a landmark moment in the history of science and science policy. Ever since Asilomar, scientists, scholars, and policymakers have debated whether the meeting was paradigmatic or exemplary and have questioned whether future determinations about promising but potentially hazardous research are best conducted by experts behind closed doors or by some other more collaborative mechanism that affords meaningful public input or oversight.
Today, we are faced with provocative questions about the future of a new generation of genetic tools — including CRISPR genome editing — that promise to transform our health, bodies, and world. Additionally, we are encountering novel challenges related to machine learning, computer technologies, and the uses of data and surveillance. Our world is also careening to an ever-intensifying climate crisis, calling for governance and science-society relations innovations. While the technologies and circumstances may have changed, some questions remain perennial: What do scientific research, technological development, and public interest and governance look like in these brave new worlds? How can thinking with the past — those legacies we grapple with daily — help us navigate the shoals of our difficult present toward our desired futures? And most importantly, Who decides? During the two-day conference, we will explore these themes through a series of lively interventions and debates by scientists, scholars, and artists.