Mission 
International Nanotechnology and Society Network
May
2006
I. Mission
The International Nanotechnology and Society
Network (INSN) is a coalition of organizations and individuals involved
in advancing knowledge, promoting institutional innovation, engaging
policy processes, and improving decisions related to the societal
impacts of nanotechnologies and other areas of innovation that
nanotechnology may help to enable.
INSN members share a commitment to ensuring the
public value of nanotechnology in light of its potential for catalyzing
rapid and profound social change. To meet this commitment, INSN fosters
connections between the social sciences and natural science and
engineering activities related to nanotechnology, with a particular
focus on institutional innovation that can improve anticipatory
governance, regulatory response, and the just distribution of potential
benefits. INSN also develops educational programs and materials that
can help build capacity for meeting its commitment.
INSN seeks to establish a framework for equitable
participation of a range of stakeholders as partners in the process of
enabling the reflexive co-evolution of nanotechnology and society.
INSN:
- Contributes to the articulation of theoretical
and empirical frameworks for the organization and conduct of
research on nanotechnology in society;
- Provides a forum for sharing the findings of
research conducted by its members;
- Creates opportunities for enhanced learning
among its members through comparative research activities;
- Fosters exchanges of students and
professionals among its membership;
- Emphasizes the inclusion of developing nations
in decision-making processes and research activities related to
nanotechnology;
- Facilitates collaboration between its research
activities, nanotechnology innovation activities and institutions,
and policy processes related to nanotechnology.
- Acts as an international clearinghouse for
written products of its members, via an actively managed website;
and
- Encourages interchange among members through
its periodic meetings, website, listserves, and other mechanisms.
II. Governance
A. Executive Committee: Governance structure of
INSN is determined by an executive committee made up of representatives
of key nanotechnology-in-society research centers and other individuals
to assure effective geographic and institutional representation. The
inaugural Executive Committee is:
Institutional Representatives
Barbara Harthorn—CNS-UCSB
Arie Rip—Nanoned
Daniel Sarewitz—CNS-ASU
James Wilsdon—Demos
Geographic Representatives
Guillermo Foladori—Universidad Autonoma de
Zacatecas, Mexico
Julia Guivant—Federal University of Santa Catarina,
Brazil
Alfred Nordmann, EU
Masahiro Takemura, Japan
Members will serve in staggered terms for two
years. The committee will draw up additional INSN governance guidelines
as necessary and appropriate. Additional members may be added to the
committee as deemed necessary during deliberations at future INSN
meetings.
B. Membership: INSN Membership is available to
researchers studying societal issues related to nanotechnology. Members
may act as representatives of nanotechnology-in-society research
programs/centers/etc., or as individuals. Membership means: 1)
Inclusion on the INSN list server; 2) Inclusion on the members page of
the INSN website with contact information and links; and 3) Open
invitation to participate in all INSN meetings and activities.
C. Decision making: INSN exists to pursue the
mission and facilitate the activities described above. The main
mechanism for developing and initiating activities will be through
discussions at periodic meetings, augmented by list server discussions
and other informal interactions.
D. Funding: Initial funding has been provided
through operating funds of various INSN institutional participants.
Future approaches to funding INSN activities should be addressed as soon
as possible.
E. Meetings: Ideally, INSN should have one
general meeting per year, and one smaller research meeting per year. To
minimize expenditures, meetings should, when possible, be piggybacked on
other conferences and meetings where INSN members are likely to be in
attendance, e.g., 4S and AAAS.
III. Integrated Framework for Activities
The foundational precept for INSN is that the
effective governance of nanotechnology depends on the close coupling of
inquiry and practice in social science, natural science and engineering,
and public policy. INSN aims to enhance collaborations across national
and disciplinary boundaries among social scientists whose approaches are
consistent with this precept. INSN members will be working in six
interdependent areas:
I.
Engagement with Nanoscientists and Engineers and the Design of
Research Environments
II.
Societal Governance of Technological Change
III.
Political Economy and Culture of Nanotechnology
IV.
S & T Dynamics
V.
Frames and Claims
VI.
Learning
a.
Reflexive social science
b.
Education and curriculum
c.
Social learning
The cumulative aim of integrated action in these
six areas is to support a capacity for the reflexive co-evolution of
nanotechnology and society by expanding the contextual awareness and
range of choices available to decision makers who plan, fund, conduct,
apply, monitor, regulate, and use nanoscale science and engineering.
These areas of activity are not distinct categories
but are instead tightly linked; the interactions among them are
represented graphically below. The matrix describes INSN’s activities as
a product of focus—factors internal and external to nanotechnology—and
agenda—inquiry for understanding (research) and inquiry for change
(policy and practice).

The cell for research into the technical
nanotechnology enterprise we call “S & T Dynamics.” Investigations into
the factors that influence the direction, velocity, synergies and dead
ends within the nanotechnology research enterprise are important when
attempting to assess technologies. Techniques such as data and text
mining, bibliometrics, and interviews, and data on venture and corporate
investments, can be used to identify areas of convergence and rapid
advance, the nature of commercial activities in firms, and relationships
between public research and commercial outcomes. Applied globally, these
techniques provide much deeper insights than NSE budget amounts or
number of patents, revealing as well which countries are producing
‘quality’ research, which countries are in the best position to
capitalize on innovation within NSE, and where the economic and social
rewards are going to be found.
The cell for inquiry into policy and practice
regarding internal factors in nanotechnology we call “Design of Research
Environments and Engagement with Nanoscientists and Engineers.” The term
“engagement” encompasses natural and social scientists interacting in a
manner that both parties find useful and neither party feels
marginalized. Engagement of social scientists with natural scientists
aims at two goals: 1) building reflexivity into the R & D enterprise by
having NSE researchers engage and consider their work from a societal
perspective, and utilizing that perspective to make choices concerning
present and future research directions: and 2) making NSE scientists and
engineers comfortable with the presence of social scientists so that the
research environment can be studied to discern how different
environments can lead to different types of research, social relevance,
and impacts and how the roles of leadership, types of organization, and
levels of funding contribute to these creative environments.
The cell for research on external factors in
nanotechnology we call “Political Economy and Culture of NSE.” This
involves understanding the relationships among political and social
support for nanotechnology, and its economic and social benefits and
challenges. Nanotechnology is generally viewed favorably from the
perspective of national policy makers around the globe. How did
nanotechnology make it into the spotlight of political agendas? What
forces maintain the nanotechnology enterprise as a funding priority? How
do early nanotech products and other outcomes affect the policy
environment?
The cell for inquiry for change regarding external
factors in nanotechnology we call “Societal Governance of NSE.” How do
society and affected populations within it adapt to the increasing rate
of technological change, specifically to outcomes from the NSE research
endeavor? The INSN is in a unique position to provide a global
perspective on the effects of nanotechnology on the broad spectrum of
socio-economic classes and the variety of geo-political positions.
Questions of how NSE researchers view the societal response to
technological change should also be addressed in the context of
increasing reflexive capacity.
Claims about the NSE enterprise, and how they are
framed in broader contexts, have enormous effect on system dynamics,
defining how nanotechnology is viewed publicly, commercially, and
politically. This activity area will explore the ways that benefits and
risks (real and predicted) of NSE research outcomes are integrated into
all of the other activity areas. For example, the framing of
nanotechnology as a technological fix for global poverty can be explored
in Societal Governance and S&T Dynamics.
It is impossible to separate cleanly any one of
these research areas from the rest. INSN will catalyze work at the
interface between them, conducted by researchers whose experience spans
geo-political boundaries. This collaborative and synthetic capability
is the most important aspect of the network.
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