Product, not process! Explaining a basic concept in agricultural biotechnologies and food safety

Life Sci Soc Policy. 2017 Dec;13(1):3. doi: 10.1186/s40504-017-0048-8. Epub 2017 Mar 3.

Abstract

Most life scientists have relentlessly recommended any evaluative approach of agri-food products to be based on examination of the phenotype, i.e. the actual characteristics of the food, feed and fiber varieties: the effects of any new cultivar (or micro-organism, animal) on our health are not dependent on the process(es), the techniques used to obtain it.The so-called "genetically modified organisms" ("GMOs"), on the other hand, are commonly framed as a group with special properties - most frequently seen as dubious, or even harmful.Some social scientists still believe that considering the process is a correct background for science-based understanding and regulation. To show that such an approach is utterly wrong, and to invite scientists, teachers and science communicators to explain this mistake to students, policy-makers and the public at large, we imagined a dialogue between a social scientist, who has a positive opinion about a certain weight that a process-based orientation should have in the risk assessment, and a few experts who offer plenty of arguments against that view. The discussion focuses on new food safety.

Keywords: Agricultural biotechnologies; Food safety; GMO.

MeSH terms

  • Agriculture*
  • Animals
  • Biotechnology*
  • Consumer Product Safety
  • Food
  • Food Safety*
  • Food, Genetically Modified*
  • Humans
  • Plants, Genetically Modified
  • Risk Assessment