Abstract The overarching question raised in this special issue is whether societies can, do or indeed should steer new and emergent science and technological development and its management on to trajectories construed as more or less ‘desirable’. It therefore sits at the interface of two arenas. These are governance: processes of shaping/steering emergent technologies and markets; and sustainability: normative agendas incorporating a range of potentially competing conjectures and internally inconsistent desires such as to facilitate rather than stifle innovation, to enable economic development, to anticipate or deploy strategies to cope with risk and uncertainty, and to encourage technological developments that benefit rather than harm humans, their quality of life and the natural environment. Despite the potential for apparent empirical inconsistencies and contradictions that manifest as outcomes of the negotiation of these aims, there is (pace Karl Polanyi) a normative entry point to all of the articles and the material they draw upon, which is the idea that markets and technologies should be the handmaiden of societies, not vice versa. It is now widely recognized that ‘nanotechnology’ is a diverse set of feasible procedures emerging from scientific possibilities to enable the production of artefacts at the nanoscale creating new products, processes and services. Attention has to be paid to the desirability of these artefacts, which involve social, economic, ecologic, political and ethical matters that surround their emergence. The purpose of this special issue is to set out the current and future prospects for the widespread use (or innovation) of technological convergence at the nanoscale to create nano-artefacts, and the needs for governance and regulation that will accompany these innovations.
[1]
R. Feynman.
There's plenty of room at the bottom
,
1999
.
[2]
J. Stiglitz,et al.
The Great Transformation: The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time
,
2001
.
[3]
Mark S. Granovetter,et al.
The Sociology of Economic Life
,
1991
.
[4]
J. Schumpeter.
The Theory of Economic Development: An Inquiry into Profits, Capital, Credit, Interest, and the Business Cycle
,
1934
.
[5]
J. Schumpeter.
Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy
,
1943
.
[6]
K. Eric Drexler,et al.
Engines of Creation: the Coming Era of Nanotechnology
,
1986
.
[7]
Vincent Mangematin,et al.
Understanding the emergence and deployment of “nano” S&T
,
2007,
0911.3323.
[8]
Mark Harvey,et al.
The Ordering of Change: Polanyi, Schumpeter and the Nature of The Market Mechanism
,
2004
.
[9]
J. Metcalfe,et al.
Limits to the economy of knowledge and knowledge of the economy
,
2005
.