BioSocieties paper by Julie Netherland and Helena Hansen examines the maintenance of white race through opioid policy, regulation and marketing

ABSTRACT:

The US ‘War on Drugs’ has had a profound role in reinforcing racial hierarchies. Although Black Americans are no more likely than Whites to use illicit drugs, they are 6–10 times more likely to be incarcerated for drug offenses. Meanwhile, a very different system for responding to the drug use of Whites has emerged. This article uses the recent history of White opioids – the synthetic opiates such as OxyContin® that gained notoriety starting in the 1990s in connection with epidemic prescription medication abuse among White, suburban and rural Americans and Suboxone® that came on the market as an addiction treatment in the 2000s – to show how American drug policy is racialized, using the lesser known lens of decriminalized White drugs. Examining four ‘technologies of whiteness’ (neuroscience, pharmaceutical technology, legislative innovation and marketing), we trace a separate system for categorizing and disciplining drug use among Whites. This less examined ‘White drug war’ has carved out a less punitive, clinical realm for Whites where their drug use is decriminalized, treated primarily as a biomedical disease, and where their whiteness is preserved, leaving intact more punitive systems that govern the drug use of people of color.

Full paper available here.

UPenn Anthropology Spring 2016 Lecture Series: "Extinction"

The Spring Anthropology colloquium series will explore the concept of extinction as it is being understood, witnessed, and debated in the early 21st century. What kind of deliberations and actions are made on the basis of something—a way of life, a language, or a body of evidence—that is said to be disappearing?  Answers to the question of extinction often exceed theoretical frames, making extinction, near-extinction, and the ‘hour’ of extinction, for that matter, not at all transparent phenomena. An anthropological ‘four-field’ approach will help navigate this boundary object and the complex empirical realities it entails.

Full schedule available here.

Publication of Yudell et al., "Taking Race Out of Human Genetics"

In the 5 February 2016 issue of Science, Yudell, Roberts, DeSalle, and Tishkoff call for "Taking Race Out of Human Genetics." Yudell et al. argue:

In the wake of the sequencing of the human genome in the early 2000s, genome pioneers and social scientists alike called for an end to the use of race as a variable in genetic research. Unfortunately, by some measures, the use of race as a biological category has increased in the postgenomic age. Although inconsistent definition and use has been a chief problem with the race concept, it has historically been used as a taxonomic categorization based on common hereditary traits (such as skin color) to elucidate the relationship between our ancestry and our genes. We believe the use of biological concepts of race in human genetic research—so disputed and so mired in confusion—is problematic at best and harmful at worst. It is time for biologists to find a better way.

The full article is available by clicking here.

 

FINAL AGENDA: Symbioses retreat (29 Jan.)

Symbioses: A BioSocial Network
Rutgers Institute for Health, Friday, January 29, 9:30AM-4:30PM
  1st Fl Conf Rm, 112 Paterson St. New Brunswick (1 block from NJ Transit/Amtrak New Brunswick Station)
Directions: http://www.ihhcpar.rutgers.edu/directions.asp

9:00AM Coffee and bagels

9:30 Welcome
Catherine Lee (Sociology, Rutgers), Helena Hansen (Anthropology and Psychiatry, NYU) 
9:35 Introductions

10AM Biosocial innovations in curriculum, publishing and training*
Round table chair: Susan Lindee (History and Sociology of Science, UPenn)

Katayoun Chamany (Biology, The New School)
Catherine Panter-Brick (Anthropology, Yale, and Senior Editor, Social Science & Medicine)
Christine Bachrach (National Director, RWJ Foundation Health & Society Scholars Program)

11:15 Gender and development over the life course*
Round table chair: Emily Martin (Anthropology, NYU)

Dolores Malaspina (Psychiatry, NYU)
Kristen Springer (Sociology, Rutgers)
Rebecca Jordan-Young (Women and Gender Studies, Barnard)

12:30PM Lunch

1:15 The biosociality of climate change* 
Round table chair: Amber Benezra (Anthropology, NYU)

Adriana Petryna (Anthropology, UPenn)
Jeffrey Shaman (Environmental Health, Columbia)
David Bond (Center for Advancement of Public Action, Bennington College)

2:30 Coffee break

2:45 Race as Biomarker*
Round table chair: Catherine Lee (Sociology, Rutgers)

Rachel Watkins (Biological Anthropology, American University)
Michael Ralph (Social and Cultural Analysis, NYU)
Dorothy Roberts (Law and Sociology, UPenn)

4:00 Next Steps
Discussion chair: Rayna Rapp (Anthropology, NYU)

4:30 Close

4:45 Optional cash bar/meal at Harvest Moon, a casual brewery/eatery within walking distance from the meeting
Directions: http://www.harvestmoonbrewery.com/directions/


* Roundtables consist of 15 minutes of research highlights and biosocial collaboration lessons learned by each speaker, followed by group discussion

International Journal of Mental Health call for papers - Special Issue: "Biosocial approaches to understanding mental health and behavior.

This special issue will feature original research, conceptual essays and reviews that bridge social science and life science in theory and method. It asks how interdisciplinary approaches lead us to reconceptualize the interaction of social with biological processes. Relevant topics include but are not limited to epigenetics, neuroplasticity, and the microbiome, as well as the dynamics of gender, race, ethnicity and socioeconomic status in shaping mental health and behavioral outcomes through the interaction of social and biological systems.

For Author guidelines see http://explore.tandfonline.com/cfp/beh/mimh-cfp

Deadline for submission: April 1, 2016