GM plants as sources of im/possibility: A developmental systems view of stabilization

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Abstract

This paper generates a heuristic understanding of the stabilization dynamic of genetically modified plants. This heuristic, the paper argues, can provide a fruitful platform for studying the political dimensions embedded in GM plants. Focusing on stabilization is important, because outside laboratories a plant can have an intermediating role only as a cultivar; as something which has integrated into biological processes and human practices. The actual stabilizing entity is not just an object, but a dynamic analogous to what is called a developmental system. The empowering or suppressing consequences of GM plants depend significantly on the qualities of this spatio-temporal order stabilizing; on the "possibility space" it opens up. Moreover, stabilization connects and makes things possible, but it does not do so automatically, predictably - or for everyone. Centralized control may support stability, but it may also increase vulnerability by reducing local possibility space. © 2008 Taylor & Francis.

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Valve, H. (2008). GM plants as sources of im/possibility: A developmental systems view of stabilization. New Genetics and Society, 27(4), 339–352. https://doi.org/10.1080/14636770802485426

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