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Liberating Knowledge

press-release

Thu, 22 Dec 2005 16:28:28 +0000

 

T

 

he Institute of Science in Society

Science Society Sustainability http://www.i-sis.org.uk

General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing List

press-release ISIS Director m.w.ho@i- sis.org.uk

 

 

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at http://www.i-

sis.org.uk/LiberatingKnowledge.php

 

 

 

 

ISIS Press Release 21/12/05

Liberating Knowledge

 

Mae-Wan Ho, Institute of Science in Society, PO Box 32097, London NW1

0XR, UK www.i- sis.org.uk

 

Manuscript prepared for Centre Europe Tiers Monde (CETIM)*

 

A fully referenced version of this article is posted on ISIS members'

website. Details here.

 

 

 

Abstract

 

The western knowledge that dominates the world today is in crisis

across all disciplines, with science being the worst afflicted.

Reliable knowledge is being drowned out by relentless propaganda and a

concerted disinformation campaign aimed at promoting the commercial

products of knowledge, while critical information on the dangers

involved is summarily dismissed and suppressed. Worst of all,

knowledge is being privatised and contained as the " intellectual

property " of corporations, giving corporations unprecedented control,

not just over knowledge of nature, but over life and the necessities

of life.

 

Liberating knowledge is the most urgent task facing humanity, without

which there can be no reliable knowledge freely accessible to all

that's absolutely required for effective action.

 

*To appear in Health by and for the People: Reappropriating Health for

All after 25 Years of Neoliberal Obstruction. Enquiries to: CETIM, 6

rue JC AMAT, 1201 Geneva, Switzerland, cetim. Tel: 0041 22

731 59 63.

Why liberate knowledge?

 

The western knowledge that dominates the world today is in crisis

across all disciplines, with science being the worst afflicted. I

first became aware of that soon after I was moved to join the genetic

engineering debate, partly because I was inspired by people like

Martin Khor of the Third World Network and Vandana Shiva of the

Research Foundation for Science and Ecology in India among others, who

have been unstinting and untiring in their brilliant efforts to save

the world. So I thought I could contribute something useful too, as a

scientist, for the scientific information available to our

policy-makers and to the public was so lacking in quality.

 

I take science very seriously both as a scientist and especially as a

member of the general public. We need good, reliable knowledge that

can protect and sustain the planet and all its inhabitants; and that's

good science by another name. Equally important, without critical

scientific information, the public cannot participate in making

decisions that may put them in danger, destroy their most deeply held

moral codes, or profoundly change their lives in other ways; and there

will be no way to draw on the collective wisdom and inventiveness of

the human species to save the world.

 

But I soon learned how difficult it was to access and publicize

reliable knowledge. It was being drowned out by relentless propaganda

and a concerted disinformation campaign aimed at promoting the

commercial products of knowledge, while critical information on the

dangers involved was summarily dismissed and ruthlessly suppressed.

Worst of all, knowledge was being privatised and contained as the

" intellectual property " of corporations, giving corporations

unprecedented control, not just over knowledge of nature, but over

life and the necessities of life.

 

Liberating knowledge is the most urgent task facing humanity, without

which there can be no reliable knowledge freely accessible to all

that's absolutely required for effective action.

Enclosure of the intellectual commons

 

Living processes, genes and organisms are nature's inventions, and

could belong to no one. Granting patents on them was a new departure

in the history of protecting human inventions; as based on the

previously existing patenting laws, it would have required the actual

creation of an organism. Organisms are after all responsible for the

living processes that enable us to reproduce, provide us with food,

shelter and all the other necessities of life; without the organism, a

gene – a bit of DNA – can do none of those things.

 

Some critics say these " patents on life " are new because they are

awarded for discoveries or knowledge, but that's not even true [1]. In

far too many cases, patents are granted for genes or DNA sequences on

which there is practically no knowledge; while many others are based

on associations with specific traits or diseases, however weak, that

are said to be useful for dubious " diagnostic purposes " .

 

In August 2005, biotech giant Syngenta revealed that it has filed 15

global patents on nearly 30 000 gene sequences from rice (out of a

total of 37 544), which would grant it monopolistic rights not only

over rice, but over other major crops plants with similar gene

sequences such as wheat, maize, sorghum, rye, soybean, as well as

banana, fruits and vegetables [2]. " This would mean, in practice, that

the company would be able to determine price, access, research and

re-use of seeds in future [3]. "

 

I had warned of rampant gene patenting and its consequences when the

rice genome sequence was first announced in 2002 [4] ( " Rice genome in

corporate hands " , SiS 15), but had underestimated the scale and the

scope of the patents that Syngenta is claiming. It would be a

violation of basic human rights to grant those patents; it would be

legitimising the theft of genetic resources that provide food and

livelihood for billions of the poorest people in the world.

 

The patenting of human genes had begun much earlier. The human genome

had been handed over to private ownership by our governments in the

industrialised countries through the publicly-funded human genome

project [5]. By now, more than 4 000 human genes – 20 percent of the

total - have been patented in the United States, mainly by private

companies or universities [6] seeking to cash in on gene tests

promoted in the popular and not so popular media. Such gene tests may

help diagnose diseases in patients that have already fallen ill; but

they are generally known to give poor prediction on an individual's

future health status even for so-called single gene diseases such as

cystic fibrosis [5, 7]. Applying them to healthy individuals could

cause unnecessary anxiety, and end up undermining their prospects for

health insurance and employment, as insurance companies, if not

employers, are set to demand a disclosure of gene test results. Where

gene sequences are useful, as in identifying strains of bacterial or

viral pathogens, proprietary rights through patenting have impeded

diagnosis and treatment.

 

The enclosure of knowledge through " intellectual property rights " is

bad for science and for citizens in the industrialised world; it is

disastrous for developing countries. Yet, it is being imposed on

developing countries against their will, contrary to their social

values and economic interest and in violation of basic human rights.

This is done under the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of

Intellectual property Rights (TRIPS) in the World Trade Organization

(WTO). To add insult on injury, indigenous knowledge systems all over

the world are denigrated and suppressed in favour of western science,

at the same time that they are expropriated in flagrant acts of

biopiracy [8]. A sequence of a gene that can be obtained within hours

in the laboratory is considered sufficient for claiming intellectual

property right over plant resources that local communities have

researched, developed and used for millennia.

 

The first act of liberating knowledge is put an end to patents on life

and other enclosures of the intellectual commons that compromise

people's access to the necessities of life, including health and

affordable medicine, especially indigenous medicine in serious

diseases such as AIDS [9]. Biopiracy and commercial exploitation of

indigenous medicinal plants can lead to price increases overnight that

put essential and widely available medicines beyond people's reach.

Universities and science for rent

 

As symptomatic of the crisis of knowledge, all the traditional

accepted standards of good science are being compromised and eroded as

corporations take over academia and our government [10, 11]. In the

United States, allegations of faked scientific findings increased 50

percent between 2003 and 2004 [12]; the federal Office of Research

Integrity received 274 allegations of scientific fraud in 2004, but

was able to complete only 23 investigations on account of its limited

budget.

 

" The basic role of the university in a democratic society is at risk.

Alone among social institutions, the university's mission is the

unqualified pursuit and public dissemination of truth and knowledge.

The university serves the broad public interest to the extent it

treasures informed analysis, critical inquiry and uncompromising

standards of intellectual integrity. " James L. Turk, executive

director of the Canadian Association of University Teachers wrote in

2001 [13].

 

It was the general cutback in public funding that drove universities

to seek support from corporations. Corporate funding and influence has

since infiltrated into every discipline. " Corporate donations to

universities are often made in utmost secrecy, " Turk wrote, " Canada's

largest and most richly endowed university, the University of Toronto,

signed secret deals in 1997 with the Joseph Rotman Foundation ($15

million for the Faculty of Management Studies), CEO Peter Munk of

Barrick Gold and Horsham corporations ($6.4 million for the Centre for

International Studies) and Nortel ($8 million for the Nortel Institute

for Telecommunications). The deals allow the corporations

unprecedented influence over the academic direction of University of

Toronto programmes. "

 

Today, " wealth creation " and " the knowledge economy " resound in the

halls of higher learning and in the speeches of politicians, including

the government's chief scientific adviser Prof. Sir David King [14],

who presented a glowing view of British science, and even attributed

its success to the cutback in public spending in the 1980s; likening

it to the necessary " pruning " that improves the growth of plants.

 

The same clichés of " competitiveness of enterprise " , " knowledge

society " and " knowledge exploitation for economic growth " are guiding

principles of the " Lisbon Agenda " that's to be enacted in Europe's

next science funding programme, Framework 7 [15].

Suppression and victimisation of honest scientists

 

Worst of all, suppression and misrepresentation are the order of the

day [16]. Scientists who try to tell the truth that's uncomfortable

for industry and wealth creation are victimised by their own

universities and the scientific establishment. The case of Dr. Arpad

Pusztai in the UK is well known. He was a highly respected member of

the scientific establishment, and a supporter of genetic modification

until 1998, when his research turned up disturbing indications on the

inherent health hazards of genetically modified (GM) food and feed

[16, 17]. His job was terminated overnight, the Royal Society hastily

set up a committee to discredit him in his absence; and attempts to

defame and vilify him continue to this day.

 

Prof. Ignacio Chapela first became a public figure, also in 1998. He

was one of the few academics to oppose the takeover of his department

in the University of California at Berkeley by Novartis Corporation.

In 2001, he and his graduate student reported that Mexican landraces

had been contaminated by transgenic maize in a prominent scientific

journal; and were hit by an immediate barrage of vehement criticisms

and attack from scientists friendly to the industry. When Chapela's

tenure came up for review, it was delayed, and then denied. Chapela

won his case after battling the university administration for four

years, and only after he initiated a lawsuit against the university.

He dropped the lawsuit recently, but said he would not abandon his

efforts to hold the university accountable [18]: " I look forward to

continue challenging, in the best forums that I can find, what I

believe is a corrupt and illegitimate takeover of the public

university away from its public mandate. "

 

In September 2005, environment professor Stephane McLachlan and his

Ph. D. student Ian Mauro at the University of Manitoba in Canada

accused the university of blocking the release of their video

exploring the risks of GM crops while courting funds from biotech

companies. The video, based on interviews with Prairie farmers about

their experiences with GM canola, was completed in 2002 as a full-

length documentary with help from an independent Winnipeg filmmaker,

Jim Sanders. But it has never been screened because the university and

the researchers, who share the copyright have been unable to negotiate

an agreement on its release [19]. James Turk compared the case to the

University of Toronto's failure to support Dr. Nancy Olivieri when the

drug company Apotex tried to prevent her from going public with her

concerns about one of their drugs. The University of Toronto was also

negotiating a huge donation from the company.

 

Fred Kirschenmann was director of the Leopold Center in Iowa State

University for the past five years, until he was suddenly and

involuntarily made " distinguished fellow " . His sins? He argued once

too often that there is an urgent need for " a more intelligent,

diversified farming system. " Genetic modification, he said, is " simply

another tool to make the monoculture work a little longer " in the face

of the pests and diseases that monocultures encourage. In other words,

he was simply carrying out what an academic is mandated to do, which

made him persona non grata.

 

For his parting shot, Kirschenmann said [20] Iowa State's College of

Agriculture " draws agribusiness cash the way a penned-up pig wallowing

in its own waste draws flies. "

 

I was strongly encouraged to retire early and hounded out of my

university department in 2000 [11]. My sins? I have been providing

critical information on the risks of genetic modification to the

public and policy-makers worldwide since 1994, all of which

incidentally, have been amply confirmed. But the denial and

disinformation continue.

Scientists for rent

 

What we are up against is a powerful pro-GM lobby that has infiltrated

every level of civil society from international aid agencies to

governments and academia; I have crossed paths with it all too often

[21, 22].

 

Monsanto and other biotech corporations have been funding university

scientists to do their research cheaply, to be sure; but also to do

propaganda, to `debate' with scientists like me, to defame us, and

spread falsehoods; and like the transnational corporations, the pro-GM

lobby operates worldwide.

 

Recently in Lusaka, I came up against a scientist from the University

of Zambia leading an aggressive disinformation campaign against his

country's rejection of GM crops and GM food aid. To make his case, he

exploited the most horrendous image of an emaciated African child

" crawling towards food aid with a vulture at its back " . The child was

saved; we were told, but the journalist who took the picture committed

suicide. Following him, a scientist from Kenya used the same image and

told the exact same story. The story turned out to be complete

fabrication [23]. The photograph was taken in Sudan in 1992 long

before GM crops and GM food aid became an issue. No one knew if the

child was saved. The photographer made no attempt to help her, and was

criticised for it; he committed suicide because he ran out of money.

Another science is possible

 

Our struggle to liberate knowledge is not limited to genetic

engineering. Hot on the heels of genetic engineering is

nanotechnology, which has spawned a new discipline of nanotoxicity

years after research and commercialisation has raced ahead [24]. But

as usual, the research budget for toxicity is extremely limited

compared with that for product development for commercial

exploitation. Also on offer are implants for electronic surveillance

and mind control [25], not to mention a host of " non-lethal " and

" crowd control " electronic devices that may be sophisticated, overt

and covert torture equipment [26, 27].

 

Technology is running out of control; it is working against the public

good and against nature, not just because it has been completely

co-opted by " wealth creation " , or that science is in bed with big

business; but most of all because western science is rooted in seeing

nature as hostile machine, separate from us, to be disassembled, to be

tamed and tortured, to satisfy our every conceivable need, however

egregious or banal [8]. It is ultimately this mistaken view of nature

that has brought our planet to the brink of a mass extinction that

will include our own species.

 

We desperately need another science that sees nature as an organic

whole, which includes the scientist. In the words of quantum physics,

the observer and observed - the knower and the known - are mutually

entangled, and each act of knowing irreversibly alters both. That is

ultimately why we must know responsibly, sensitively and without

violence. I have articulated this radically holistic science of the

organism in my book The Rainbow and the Worm [28], where I also show

how it reconnects western science to traditional knowledge systems

worldwide [29], transforming the basis of knowledge and the meaning of

life itself.

Spreading knowledge

 

A concrete way to breach the enclosure of the intellectual commons is

to engage in spreading knowledge as widely as possible. Knowledge

that's not free to circulate cannot grow and will eventually die.

 

That's why I co-founded the Institute of Science in Society in 1999

(see Box 1).

 

Box 1

The Institute of Science in Society

 

Objectives

 

· To promote social and policy changes towards a sustainable,

equitable world

 

· To reclaim science for the public good

 

· To promote a contemporary, holistic science of the organism and

sustainable systems

 

Working through

 

1. Lively reports posted on website www.i-sis.org.uk (more than 50 000

hits a day in busy months) and circulated to an e-mail list (about 3

000) that includes all sectors of civil society worldwide, from small

farmers in India to policy-makers in the United Nations

 

2. An attractively illustrated quarterly magazine Science in Society

(print-run 1 500 plus online subscription)

 

3. Major campaigns and initiatives (see below)

 

4. In-depth reports and books, such as Unravelling AIDS (2005), The

Case for a GM-Free Sustainable World (2003, 2004) and Living with the

Fluid Genome (2003)

 

5. Public- speaking and media-appearances in the UK and abroad

 

6. Submissions to national and international committees

 

Campaigns and initiatives include

 

1. World Scientists Open Letter, February 1999, calling for a

moratorium on genetically modified (GM) organisms, ban on patents on

life, and support for sustainable agriculture; now signed by 820

scientists from 84 countries http://www.i- sis.org.uk/list.php

 

2. Independent Science Panel (ISP) (http://www.indsp.org), May 2003.

Its report (The Case for a GM-Free Sustainable World) calling for a

ban on GM crops and a comprehensive shift to sustainable agriculture

was presented in the UK- and European Parliament, circulated

worldwide, and translated into 6 or more languages since.

 

3. Sustainable World Initiative, April 2005,http://www.i-

sis.org.uk/SustainableWorldInitiativeF.php. A first international

conference was held 14/15 July 2005 in UK Parliament, to be followed

by a weekend workshop 21-22 January 2006, towards building an

innovative demonstration farm that turns agricultural wastes into

biogas energy and rich fertilizer while saving substantially on

greenhouse gas emissions. We aim to produce a definitive report on

sustainable food systems under a new economic model, together with the

socio-economic, political and structural changes needed for

implementation.

 

We have created a website that probably contains the largest number of

accessible scientific reports and analyses across the disciplines, and

is growing all the time.

 

We e-mail up-to-date reports to thousands, many of our rs are

list servers. Our readers range from small farmers in India to

policy-makers in the United Nations. We also publish a quarterly

magazine to update on scientific findings that have large implications

for society and public policies.

 

With the start of our ISIS website in 1999, we initiated the World

Scientists Statement and Open Letter, calling for a moratorium on

environmental releases of GMOs, a ban on patents on life, and support

for non-GM sustainable agriculture. To-date, more than 820 scientists

from 84 countries have signed the letter.

Convention on knowledge

 

To raise the profile of knowledge and the importance of liberating

knowledge, we produced a discussion paper, Towards a Convention on

Knowledge in 2001 [30]. It was adopted by Scientists for Global

Responsibility with a membership of 600; the International Network of

Engineers and Scientists, which includes a union with 1.5 million

members; the Third World Network; and Tebtebba, a major network of

indigenous peoples. We launched this paper at the Earth Summit in

Johannesburg, 2002, at a pre- scheduled event organised by UNESCO and

Tebtebba Foundation, " Linking Traditional and Scientific Knowledge for

Sustainable Development " .

 

A summary of what the Convention involves is given in Box 2. It is not

intended as a legal document, but purely to express a commitment of

civil society to develop and use knowledge responsibly and for the

good of all.

 

Box 2

Convention on Knowledge (2002)

 

· No knowledge should be developed and used for destructive,

oppressive or aggressive military ends

 

· Keep knowledge in the public domain, open and accessible to all

 

· Promote knowledge in inclusive and pluralistic forms, especially

indigenous knowledge

 

· Promote knowledge for sustainability

 

· Promote knowledge that serves public good, independent of commercial

interests or government control

 

· Promote knowledge that makes the world equitable and life-enhancing

for all in every respect

 

The final section of our paper contains suggestions on how to move

forward, the most important of which is to establish a new working

partnership between the scientists and their local communities.

Scientists should work much more closely, if not directly, with local

communities, so that people's concerns and aspirations can help shape

the research. More importantly, scientists could benefit greatly from

local knowledge. We want top priority to be given to revitalising and

protecting traditional agricultural and healthcare systems from

biopiracy and globalisation, and to developing sciences and

technologies appropriate for the community.

 

We recognise that not all research could be done with or within local

communities. But even for research that is largely laboratory-based,

the scientists should maintain close touch with the community of which

they are part, and be responsive and sensitive to people's concerns.

 

We set out some suggestions on science and technologies that should be

supported, and the criteria of appropriate technologies. We also

identified technologies that should not be supported, or should be

subject to international peaceful control.

Independent scientists of the world unite

 

To counteract the suppression of scientists and scientific evidence

and to contribute to the global debate over GM crops, ISIS organised a

major event in London 10 May 2003, in which twenty-four scientists

from seven countries launched themselves as the Independent Science

Panel (ISP) on GM, to ensure that all the scientific evidence will be

heard, so people can make the right choice for the future of food and

agriculture.

 

Two hundred people from all over Britain attended the ISP launch,

including the then Environment Minister, Michael Meacher. Meacher lost

his jobs several weeks later.

 

The ISP issued a statement (see Box 3), based on the Convention on

Knowledge.

 

Box 3

Statement of the Independent Science Panel

 

The Independent Science Panel (ISP) is an international panel of

scientists from many disciplines committed to:

 

1. Promoting science for the public good, independent of commercial

and other special interests, or of government control

 

2. Maintaining the highest standards of integrity and impartiality in

science

 

3. Developing sciences that can help make the world sustainable,

equitable, peaceful and life-enhancing for all its inhabitants

 

The ISP website (www.indsp.org) was created on 15 June 2003,

coinciding with the web publication of the ISP Report, The Case for a

GM-Free Sustainable World. By 3 July 12 000 people downloaded the

Report in the United States alone.

 

The Report is the most complete dossier of evidence on the problems

and hazards of GM crops as well as the many health, environmental and

social benefits of all forms of sustainable agriculture. Based on this

evidence, the ISP has called for a ban on environmental releases of GM

crops and the comprehensive shift to all forms of non-GM sustainable

agriculture.

 

The Report has been republished in the United States the following

year, and has now been translated into Spanish, French, Portuguese,

Chinese, German and Dutch; Indonesian and Italian translations are on

the way. It was presented in three successful briefings to government

and inter-governmental agencies in 2004, receiving widespread coverage

in the popular media.

 

The ISP has written many letters to government and intergovernment

agencies to support local campaigning groups.

 

We have submitted a strong comment to the European Commission, calling

on it to support independent science in its next round of science

funding (Framework 7), and to ensure maximum transparency and

democratic input in deciding funding and research priorities.

Basically, we want Europe to establish broad funding criteria that put

public interest ahead of wealth creation, and to include ethical and

safety considerations before the research is funded. We are demanding

a redistribution of the research budget away from industry and

technology-driven areas like genomics and information technologies

towards sustainable agriculture, ecology and energy use in sustainable

systems and holistic health. In particular, we want to see top

priority given to scientists working with local communities to

revitalize and protect traditional agricultural and healthcare systems.

 

At the European Parliament briefing in October 2004, ISP delivered its

strongest message: invest in sustainable agriculture right now, as

there is no other way to really feed the world under global warming.

 

As a follow-up on the ISP report, we have launched a Sustainable World

initiative to make our food production system sustainable, to

ameliorate climate change and guarantee food security for all. This

seems like a very tall order. We had our first international meeting

for the Sustainable World, and there is no doubt that we have all the

means at our disposal to do it; maybe all we need is a little dose of

idealism and quixotic daring.

 

Acknowledgment

 

I owe a lot to many people in my quest to liberating knowledge, some

of whom I shall mention here.

 

My colleagues in ISIS past and present - especially Julian Haffegee,

Sam Burcher, Andy Watton, Lim Li Ching and Rhea Gala - without whose

ingenuity and dedication, liberating knowledge would have been impossible.

 

Prof. Joe Cummins, a great friend and ally, who has stalwartly

sustained ISIS by a prolific stream of timely exposés, and has kept us

thoroughly informed and up-to-date on science matters.

 

Martin Khor and other colleagues of the Third World Network, who got

me into all this in the first place, and supported ISIS through thick

and thin.

 

Edward Goldsmith, great friend, mentor and supporter of ISIS, who is

responsible for much of my passion for `saving the world'.

 

Last but not least, Peter Saunders, my fellow traveller and constant

reference point for all the important things of life.

 

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at http://www.i-

sis.org.uk/LiberatingKnowledge.php

If you like this original article from the Institute of Science in

Society, and would like to continue receiving articles of this

calibre, please consider making a donation or purchase on our website.

ISIS is an independent, not-for- profit organisation dedicated to

providing critical public information on cutting edge science, and to

promoting social accountability and ecological sustainability in science.

 

 

The Institute of Science in Society, PO Box 32097, London NW1 OXR

telephone: [44 1994 231623] [44 20 8452 2729] [44 20 7272 5636]

 

General Enquiries sam - Website/Mailing List

press-release - ISIS Director m.w.ho@i- sis.org.uk

MATERIAL ON THIS SITE MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM WITHOUT

EXPLICIT PERMISSION. FOR PERMISSION, PLEASE CONTACT enquiries@i-

sis.org.uk

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