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Science policy on medical genetics : Knowledge and values of human heredity in the Swedish Welfare State

Tunlid, Anna LU (2015) The 2015 History of Science Society Annual Meeting
Abstract
Interest in human heredity has a long history in Sweden. In the 1920s the Parliament decided on a State institute for race biology and in the 1930s a sterilization legislation that put eugenics into practice was enacted. During the postwar decades both research and the political-medical practices were successively transformed: medical genetics became established and proclaimed as a new research field, and genetic counseling emerged with an increased emphasis on individual autonomy. The aim of this paper is to explore this development with a focus on the continuing interest in human heredity after World War two. Two interlinked processes are followed: funding of research in medical genetics and the institutionalization of clinical genetics... (More)
Interest in human heredity has a long history in Sweden. In the 1920s the Parliament decided on a State institute for race biology and in the 1930s a sterilization legislation that put eugenics into practice was enacted. During the postwar decades both research and the political-medical practices were successively transformed: medical genetics became established and proclaimed as a new research field, and genetic counseling emerged with an increased emphasis on individual autonomy. The aim of this paper is to explore this development with a focus on the continuing interest in human heredity after World War two. Two interlinked processes are followed: funding of research in medical genetics and the institutionalization of clinical genetics as a new medical specialism within the health care system. Government funding of research in human genetics rapidly expanded in the 1960s with the development of new laboratory techniques and methods and medical genetics developed to an important specialization within biomedicine. From a science policy perspective funding was legitimatized as support of both basic science and applications that could contribute to the development of the welfare state. The increased knowledge of human genetics and the laboratory methods to diagnose genetic diseases formed the basis for clinical genetics that was established in the 1970s. The paper discusses the norms and values concerning health, reproductive choices and quality of life that were intimately linked to this development. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Interest in human heredity has a long history in Sweden. In the 1920s the Parliament decided on a State institute for race biology and in the 1930s a sterilization legislation that put eugenics into practice was enacted. During the postwar decades both research and the political-medical practices were successively transformed: medical genetics became established and proclaimed as a new research field, and genetic counseling emerged with an increased emphasis on individual autonomy. The aim of this paper is to explore this development with a focus on the continuing interest in human heredity after World War two. Two interlinked processes are followed: funding of research in medical genetics and the institutionalization of clinical genetics... (More)
Interest in human heredity has a long history in Sweden. In the 1920s the Parliament decided on a State institute for race biology and in the 1930s a sterilization legislation that put eugenics into practice was enacted. During the postwar decades both research and the political-medical practices were successively transformed: medical genetics became established and proclaimed as a new research field, and genetic counseling emerged with an increased emphasis on individual autonomy. The aim of this paper is to explore this development with a focus on the continuing interest in human heredity after World War two. Two interlinked processes are followed: funding of research in medical genetics and the institutionalization of clinical genetics as a new medical specialism within the health care system. Government funding of research in human genetics rapidly expanded in the 1960s with the development of new laboratory techniques and methods and medical genetics developed to an important specialization within biomedicine. From a science policy perspective funding was legitimatized as support of both basic science and applications that could contribute to the development of the welfare state. The increased knowledge of human genetics and the laboratory methods to diagnose genetic diseases formed the basis for clinical genetics that was established in the 1970s. The paper discusses the norms and values concerning health, reproductive choices and quality of life that were intimately linked to this development. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
conference name
The 2015 History of Science Society Annual Meeting
conference location
San Francisco, United States
conference dates
2015-11-19 - 2015-11-22
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
83d685c3-a3a2-48ff-b4a8-d68fb15c2d23
date added to LUP
2017-10-16 18:28:57
date last changed
2021-01-08 16:59:10
@misc{83d685c3-a3a2-48ff-b4a8-d68fb15c2d23,
  abstract     = {{Interest in human heredity has a long history in Sweden. In the 1920s the Parliament decided on a State institute for race biology and in the 1930s a sterilization legislation that put eugenics into practice was enacted. During the postwar decades both research and the political-medical practices were successively transformed: medical genetics became established and proclaimed as a new research field, and genetic counseling emerged with an increased emphasis on individual autonomy. The aim of this paper is to explore this development with a focus on the continuing interest in human heredity after World War two. Two interlinked processes are followed: funding of research in medical genetics and the institutionalization of clinical genetics as a new medical specialism within the health care system. Government funding of research in human genetics rapidly expanded in the 1960s with the development of new laboratory techniques and methods and medical genetics developed to an important specialization within biomedicine. From a science policy perspective funding was legitimatized as support of both basic science and applications that could contribute to the development of the welfare state. The increased knowledge of human genetics and the laboratory methods to diagnose genetic diseases formed the basis for clinical genetics that was established in the 1970s. The paper discusses the norms and values concerning health, reproductive choices and quality of life that were intimately linked to this development.}},
  author       = {{Tunlid, Anna}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Science policy on medical genetics : Knowledge and values of human heredity in the Swedish Welfare State}},
  year         = {{2015}},
}