<p>“<em>Biolegality</em> offers a fascinating account of how advances in biotechnology shape our legal institutions and practices while simultaneously creating new ways for communities and societies to relate to biomedical knowledge, including genes, brains, bodies, and babies. Drawing upon an impressive range of disciplines, they convincingly demonstrate how biotechnological knowledge transforms legal knowledge and entities, reconstructs the biomedical disciplines and nature itself, and shifts the social order. This is a must-read book.” (Myles W. Jackson, Albers-Schönberg Professor in the History of Science, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, USA)<br>
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“<em>Biolegality. A Critical Introduction</em> offers an excellent account on the manifold constellations of law and biology in contemporary societies. Drawing on science and technology studies, political theory and legal anthropology, the book attends to the co-production of legal knowledge and biotechnological practices and convincingly shows how they challenge our understanding of the human and reconfigure concepts of property, personhood, kinship, community and identity.” (Thomas Lemke, Professor of Sociology with Focus on Biotechnologies, Nature and Society, Goethe University Frankfurt)<br>
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“Moving well past existing research that connects the separate regimes of law and the biosciences, this book illuminates their coproduction in the generative field of <em>biolegalities</em>. Van Wichelen and de Leeuw offer a significant theoretical advance in defining this compelling new paradigm. Drawing on many exemplars from the latest practical developments, they offer cutting-edge insight into the ecology of tensions and transitions in politics, life, biotechnology and law that continue to unsettle and shape the legalities surrounding human conditions of existence.” (Margaret Davies, Professor - Matthew Flinders Distinguished Professor, Flinders University, Australia)<br>
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