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Journal of Peer Production 02 (2012) Invited comment
Build your own lab: Do-it-yourself biology and the rise of citizen biotech-economies
Morgan Meyer 1
(25/06/2012)

Most articles on garage biology and do-it-yourself (DIY) biology highlight its somewhat immaterial cultures or ideologies. The issues usually raised include: the ways in which do-it-yourself biology potentially democratizes science and fosters a citizen science, that its practitioners are a "creative proof of the hacker principle", that the field is an illustration of the open source movement, that concerns about control, security and safety need to be addressed. However, rather than focusing on such relatively abstract cultures, this article focuses on the more material aspects of do-it-yourself biology: its locations, its equipments, its objects. The article presents three sites of DIY practices: a community laboratory in Paris, a private laboratory in Boston and, third, cheap alternatives to scientific equipment, such as the DremelFuge. The argument I am concerned with is that the circulability, the affordability and the mutability of objects play a key role in do-it-yourself biology and, at the same time, that we witness the emergence of a "citizen biotech-economy".
1 :  Centre de sociologie de l'innovation (CSI)
CNRS : UMR7185 – MINES ParisTech - École nationale supérieure des mines de Paris
Sciences du Vivant/Biotechnologies

Informatique/Biotechnologie

Sciences du Vivant/Biochimie, Biologie Moléculaire/Biologie moléculaire

Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Histoire, Philosophie et Sociologie des sciences

Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Architecture, aménagement de l'espace

Sciences de l'Homme et Société/Sociologie
garage biology – do-it-yourself biology – scientific equipment – geography – boundaries – creative workarounds – citizen biotech-economy