Genetic engineering – a history of failed promises
Dr Angelika Hilbeck
Friday 20 September 2024
12:30-14:00 (with a light lunch available)
The Library, Level 3 (entrance level)
Department of Environmental & Geographical Science, South Lane, Upper Campus
University of Cape Town
RSVP: Fahdelah.Hartley@uct.ac.za


Bio
Angelika Hilbeck worked as a senior scientist and lecturer at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland until December 2023. There she led the ‘Environmental Biosafety and Agroecology Group’ at the Institute of Integrative Biology. She holds a Masters degree in Agricultural Biology from the University of Hohenheim, Germany, and a PhD degree in Entomology from North Carolina State University in the US. For the past 30 years, her research has focused on biosafety and GMO risk assessment in the context of agroecology and biodiversity with research projects that have brought her to South Africa for extended periods of time. She is co-founder and board member of both the European Network of Scientists for Social and environmental Responsibility (ENSSER) and Critical Scientists Switzerland (CSS).

Abstract
Genetic Engineering (GE) has been a highly controversial field for decades. Proponents make sweeping statements about safety and praise the technology’s potential to solve burning global problems. On the other hand, sceptics point to GE’s failure to deliver on promises and highlight the reductionist nature of its underlying conceptual understanding of organisms. This seminar examines these issues alongside currently available products of GE (or the lack thereof) – developed by both older and newer GE techniques (often called ‘gene/genome editing’) and a recent push for deregulating these products in Europe and South Africa.