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Co-production, multiplied: Enactments of sex as a biological variable in US biomedicine.
Pape, Madeleine.
Afiliação
  • Pape M; University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Soc Stud Sci ; 51(3): 339-363, 2021 06.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33491581
ABSTRACT
In 2016 the US National Institutes of Health introduced a policy mandating consideration of Sex as a Biological Variable (SABV) in preclinical research. In this article, I ask what, precisely, is meant by the designation of sex as a 'biological variable', and how has its inclusion come to take the form of a policy mandate? Given the well documented complexity of 'sex' and the degree to which it is politically and scientifically contested, its enactment via policy as a biological variable is not a given. I explore how sex is multiply enacted in efforts to legitimate and realize the SABV policy and consider how the analytical lens of co-production sheds light on how and why this occurs. I show that the policy works to reassert scientific and political order by addressing two institutional concerns the so-called reproducibility crisis in preclinical research, and pervasive gender inequality across the institution of biomedicine. From here, the entity that underpins this effort - sex as a biological variable - becomes more than one thing, with enactments ranging from an assigned category, to an outcome, to a causal biological force in its own right. Sex emerges as simultaneously entangled with yet distinct from gender, and binary (female/male) yet complex in its variation. I suggest that it is in the very attempt to delineate natural from social order, and in the process create the conditions to privilege a particular kind of science and account of embodied difference, that ontological multiplicity becomes readily visible. That this multiplicity goes unrecognized points to the unifying role of an overarching ideological commitment to sex as a presumed binary and biological scientific object, the institutional dominance of which is never guaranteed.
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Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Pesquisa Biomédica Tipo de estudo: Prognostic_studies Limite: Female / Humans / Male País/Região como assunto: America do norte Idioma: En Revista: Soc Stud Sci Ano de publicação: 2021 Tipo de documento: Article País de afiliação: Suíça

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Pesquisa Biomédica Tipo de estudo: Prognostic_studies Limite: Female / Humans / Male País/Região como assunto: America do norte Idioma: En Revista: Soc Stud Sci Ano de publicação: 2021 Tipo de documento: Article País de afiliação: Suíça