Dear Friends of the Academy, 
 
The American Academy in Berlin cordially invites you to the Bosch Public Policy 
Lecture entitled
 
The Genealogy of a Gene: Patents, HIV/AIDS, and Race


by Myles W. Jackson, Albert Gallatin Research Excellence Professor of the 
History of Science,
NYU Gallatin School of Individualized Study and the Department of History, 
Faculty of Arts and Science, New York University 
on Tuesday, November 4  at 7:30 p.m. 
at the American Academy in Berlin. 
The lecture is generously supported by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.
 
In his lecture, Myles Jackson will explain how he has used the CCR5 gene as a 
heuristic tool to probe three critical developments in biotechnology from 1990 
to 2010: gene patenting, HIV/AIDS diagnostics and therapeutics, and race and 
genomics. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, Jackson ties together 
intellectual property, the sociology of race, and molecular biology by showing 
how certain patent regimes have rewarded different forms of intellectual 
property. The decision to patent genes was not inevitable, Jackson argues, nor 
'natural.' Likewise, there is nothing inevitable about using race as a major 
category of human classification. As a historian, Jackson attempts to resurrect 
the past in order to illustrate the alternative paths not taken and explain why 
they were never chosen.
 
Myles W. Jackson served as the inaugural Dibner Family Professor of the History 
and Philosophy of Science and Technology at the Polytechnic Institute of New 
York University, from 2007-2012. Jackson earned his MPhil and PhD in the 
history and philosophy of science at the University of Cambridge (1991) and his 
BA in German literature and molecular and cell biology at Cornell University 
(1986). He has taught at Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania, 
and University of Chicago, and was a senior fellow of the Dibner Institute for 
the History of Science and Technology at the Massachusetts Institute of 
Technology, and at the Max-Planck-Institute for the History of Science in 
Berlin. Myles Jackson is the 2015 recipient of the Reimar Lüst/Humboldt Prize 
from the Alexander-von-Humboldt Foundation.
 
 
Please register 
online: 
http://www.americanacademy.de/home/program/upcoming/genealogy-gene-patents-hivaids-and-race
 
fax: (030) 804 83-444,
or e-mail: [email protected]
 
 With warm regards,
 
The American Academy in Berlin
 
Program Department
Am Sandwerder 17-19 | 14109 Berlin
T: +49-30-80483 412
F: +49-30-80483 444
[email protected]
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visit our website at: www.americanacademy.de
 

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