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Call for Papers

"What's the Use of Race?"
Interdisciplinary Conference
Center for the Study of Diversity in Science, Technology,
and Medicine, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Cambridge, MA (USA)
25-26 April 2008

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Despite long-standing critiques of the concept of race from
biologists, anthropologists, and social scientists, race
continues to thrive as a category of analysis among
scholars, pundits, and the conventional wisdom. State and
federal institutions routinely collect data about race and
ethnicity. The National Institutes of Health requests that
researchers include racially and ethnically diverse
populations in their studies. Journals in fields as diverse
as genetics, public health, and sociology report data on
race and ethnicity and use these variables as significant
factors in their analyses. This pursuit of race has produced
overwhelming documentation of racial disparities, from birth
rates to education, income, crime, punishment, disease,
medical treatment, and life expectancy. While many scholars
believe that research must consider race if it is to
understand fully human biology and experience, critics argue
that race is a hollow and misleading concept that leads to
invidious distinctions. While advocates of social justice
argue that racial disparities must be documented before they
can be alleviated, our vast knowledge of disparities has not
yet led to decisive social or political action against them.

What should be done? Should the concept of race be invoked
to further the goals of science or social justice? Do racial
and ethnic distinctions produce natural categories for
scholarly or political analysis? Do the benefits of
including diverse populations in research outweigh the
potential harm caused by reifying racial and ethnic
distinctions? Will efforts to improve the precision of these
categories with subtler distinctions based on ancestry or
genetic markers increase the utility of the resulting data?
What role do funding agencies (whether governmental or
philanthropic) and journal editors have as gatekeepers for
the appropriate use of racial and ethnic categories? What
hopes and conflicts are embedded in analyses of race as a
scientific, medical or social category? This conference
invites papers from any discipline - medicine, history,
anthropology, epidemiology, STS, genetics, sociology, law,
ethics, and others - that consider these debates about the
uses of race. We hope to describe and explore the competing
interests that have made studies of race simultaneously
feared and desired.

Abstracts (300 words or less) should be submitted by October
15th to the address below. E-mail submissions are preferred.

Additional information at http://web.mit.edu/csd/WUR/


Contact:

David S. Jones, M.D., Ph.D.
Program in Science, Technology, and Society
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
77 Massachusetts Avenue E51-290
Cambridge, MA 02139
USA
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://web.mit.edu/csd/

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