China's regulation of biotechnology


Book Description

The Chinese Economy Within the next 20 years, China has the potential to become the second-largest economy of the world, second only to the U. S. (The Economist 2001a). [...] The Chinese government's failure to provide clarity regarding the future direction of regulatory policy has made foreign governments, particularly those in the European Union, extremely nervous that insufficient care will be taken in the design and enforcement of regulations to assure the food safety and environmental concerns of consumers and others in the European Union. [...] The Chinese government encouraged the use of the zones by building the required infrastructure and extending preferential measures for income tax, imports of raw materials and the introduction of foreign capital. [...] While producers are relieved that China did not close its borders to biotechnology products while the safety regulations were being developed, the lack of information and the uncertainty that the "information gap" caused resulted in hundreds of millions of dollars in lost trade (Letter to the President of the United States, 2002). [...] However, all of the 33B grown in Shandong province, which amounted to over a third of the cotton produced in the province in 1999 and about one third of the 33B grown in Hebei province, which amounted to about twenty to twenty-five percent of all cotton grown in Hebei was not purchased from Ji Dai (Pray et al.










Biotech in China


Book Description

In her quest for global leadership in science and technology, the People’s Republic of China has attained top ranks in the number of scientific publications, "hot papers," or national and international patent applications. However, analysis of the underlying structures and mechanisms is hindered by the sheer flood of data, stringent government control of all media, and ambiguities inherent in translation from Chinese. This book overcomes these difficulties and provides a concise picture of biotechnology-related research and development in China. It begins with brief accounts of China’s geography, people, political and administrational structure, economy, finance, infrastructure related to science and technology, and educational system. It presents succinct accounts on structures and developments in biomedicine, diagnostics, agriculture, fermented food, bioindustry, and environmental biotechnology, with reference to government, industry, and academia. Finally, it predicts the next steps in Chinese biotechnology for the national agenda and, in view of China’s ambitious global development strategy, the Belt and Road Initiative.




GMO China


Book Description

In China, as elsewhere, the debate over genetically modified organisms has become polarized into anti- and pro-GMO camps. Given the size of China’s population and market, much is at stake in conflicts over regulation for domestic as well as international actors. In this book, Cong Cao provides an even-handed analysis that illuminates the tensions that have shaped China’s policy toward agricultural biotechnology in a global perspective. Cao presents a comprehensive and systematic analysis of how China’s policy toward research and commercialization of genetically modified crops has shifted that explains how China’s changing GMO stances reflect its evolving position on the world stage. While China’s scientific community has set the agenda, it has encountered resistance rooted in concerns over food safety and consumers’ rights as well as issues of intellectual property rights and food sovereignty. Although Chinese leaders at first sought to take advantage of the biotech revolution by promoting GMO crop consumption, Cao demonstrates that policy has since become precautionary, as seen in new laws and regulations grounded in concerns over safety and the deferral of commercialization of GM rice. He presents China’s policies in light of changing global attitudes toward GM crops: As shifts in China have closely followed global trends, so has domestic activism. Drawing on government and scientific documents as well as interviews with scientists, officials, policy analysts, activists, and journalists, GMO China is an important book for China studies, science and technology studies, policy analysts, and professionals interested in the Chinese biotechnology market.




Biotechnology in China


Book Description

Annotation. Paperback version of a previously released examination of change and continuity in the status of black Americans, comprises papers resulting from a four-year study conducted under the aegis of the Committee on the Status of Black Americans. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.







Agricultural Biotechnology in China


Book Description

Agricultural Biotechnology in China: Origins and Prospects is a comprehensive examination of how the origins of biotechnology research agendas, along with the effectiveness of the seed delivery system and biosafety oversight, help to explain current patterns of crop development and adoption in China. Based on firsthand insights from China’s laboratories and farms, Valerie Karplus and Dr. Xing Wang Deng explore the implications of China’s investment for the nation’s rural development, environmental footprint, as well as its global scientific and economic competitiveness.