Sakari Tamminen traces the ways in which the mandates of 1992's Convention on Biological Diversity-hailed as the key symbol of a common vision for saving Earth's biodiversity-contribute less to biodiversity conservation than to individual nations using genetic resources for economic and cultural gain.
Sakari Tamminen Libri
Sakari Tamminen è professore aggiunto presso la Facoltà di Scienze Sociali dell'Università di Helsinki. Il suo lavoro approfondisce l'intricata relazione tra la tecnologia dell'informazione e il suo profondo impatto sulla società e sulla vita stessa. Come coautore di "Recoding Life: Information and the Biopolitical" e coeditore di "Bio-Objects: Life in the Twenty-First Century", Tamminen esplora la convergenza tra il regno digitale e i processi biologici. La sua ricerca illumina la complessa interazione tra informazione, potere ed esistenza nella nostra era contemporanea.



Exploring the intersection of digital technology and life sciences, this book utilizes Foucault's concept of biopolitics to examine how life is transformed into a technological entity. The authors delve into political theories of sovereignty and the geopolitical implications of nature and society, highlighting the disruptive nature of life that challenges established norms. It offers valuable insights for scholars in science and technology studies, sociology, philosophy, and anthropology, focusing on the complexities and diversities within the life sciences.
Drawing on cases from the world of ‘free software’, this book examines Rousseau’s conception of freedom and its significance in the modern world of science and technology, where so much of our experience and activity is enwrapped by algorithms, from our property to our food, bodies, brains and, by extension, our liberty.