The nanotech R&D situation in Japan and ethics of nanotechnology

Authors

  • Yutaka KATO

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54695/dss.54.05-06.2675

Keywords:

Nanotechnology, Japan, Science, Technology, Research policy, Drug industry, Government financing, Health hazards, International aspects.

Abstract

The aim of this paper is to introduce some characteristics of the historical as well as current situation of nanotech
research and development in Japan in particular, including regulations, and to discuss how ethical issues of nanotechnology
should be addressed or how the ethics of nanotechnology should be constructed to fit the situation. The first part will
center around the strength and weakness ofJapan’s nanotech R&D (research and development) and new circumstances
which nanotechnology has prompted in Japan and alongside which nanotechnology has arrived (especially
interdisciplinarity). The following prescriptive argument will, based on the descriptive account, question how to
address ethical issues of nanotechnology, taking into consideration the nature of nanotech R&D, namely continuity,
uniqueness, international dimension and political intervention, citing the example of the pharmaceutical industry. I
will argue that international cooperation in the form of mutual reference to, replication of and the integration of
guidelines and regulations, can enhance cost-effectiveness to ensure the comprehensiveness of regulatory measures

Published

2011-09-01

Issue

Section

Articles