Draft Outline For Responsible Innovation Workshop, April / May 2011

Draft Outline For Responsible Innovation Workshop, April / May 2011 Draft Outline For Responsible Innovation Workshop, April / May 2011

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Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 May 2011 Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation From concepts to practice 23-24 May 2011 The Residence of the French Ambassador to Great Britain and Northern Ireland 11 Kensington Palace Gardens LONDON W8 4QP Convenors Maggy HEINTZ Scientific attaché, physical sciences and innovation office +44 (0) 20 7073 1392 mobile +44 (0)7758 317 876 maggy.heintz@ambascience.co.uk Serge PLATTARD Science and technology counsellor office +44 (0) 20 7073 1391 mobile +44 (0)7703 187 986 serge.plattard@ambascience.co.uk 1

Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation<br />

From concepts to practice<br />

23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

The Residence of the French Ambassador<br />

to Great Britain and Northern Ireland<br />

11 Kensington Palace Gardens<br />

LONDON W8 4QP<br />

Convenors<br />

Maggy HEINTZ<br />

Scientific attaché, physical sciences and<br />

innovation<br />

office +44 (0) 20 7073 1392<br />

mobile +44 (0)7758 317 876<br />

maggy.heintz@ambascience.co.uk<br />

Serge PLATTARD<br />

Science and technology counsellor<br />

office +44 (0) 20 7073 1391<br />

mobile +44 (0)7703 187 986<br />

serge.plattard@ambascience.co.uk<br />

1


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

PROGRAMME<br />

Day 1<br />

9.15: Registration and Coffee/tea<br />

9.45: Welcome address<br />

Bernard EMIE, French Ambassador<br />

Mark SINCLAIR, Science and <strong>Innovation</strong> department, British Embassy Paris<br />

Session 1:<br />

Definitions and concepts of responsible science and innovation<br />

Jack STILGOE (Senior Policy Adviser, Royal Society Science Policy Centre)<br />

10.00: 21 st Century <strong>Innovation</strong> and Entrepreneurship<br />

John BESSANT (Chair in <strong>Innovation</strong> and Entrepreneurship - Exeter University<br />

Associate Dean for Research and Knowledge Transfer - Exeter University)<br />

10.20: <strong>Innovation</strong> in society<br />

Pierre-Benoît JOLY (Senior Research Fellow INRA/SenS and IFRIS, Paris)<br />

10.40: Defining <strong>Responsible</strong> <strong>Innovation</strong>: what, who and how<br />

Judith PETTS (Dean, Social and Human Sciences University of Southampton, member of the<br />

former Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution)<br />

11.00: <strong>Responsible</strong> innovation from an EU Commission Perspective<br />

Gilles LAROCHE (DG Research and <strong>Innovation</strong>, Head of the governance and ethics unit, EC)<br />

11.20: Coffee/tea break<br />

11.40: Promoting responsible innovation: constructive technology assessment and the Dutch experience<br />

Arie RIP (Technology Assessment of Nanotechnology, University of Twente)<br />

12.00: <strong>Responsible</strong> innovation R&D : the US experience<br />

Erik FISHER (Assistant Professor of Political Science, Arizona State University)<br />

12.20: An initial cross UK Research Council Framework for responsible innovation<br />

Richard OWEN (European Centre for Environment and Human Health, University of Exeter)<br />

12.40: <strong>Responsible</strong> innovation: the French experience<br />

Rémi BARRE (Professor of Science Policy,CNAM)<br />

13.00: Networking lunch<br />

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Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

Session 2:<br />

<strong>Responsible</strong> science and innovation: case studies of emerging technologies<br />

Robert FALKNER (Senior Lecturer in International Relations - London School of Economics and<br />

Political Science)<br />

Xavier PAVIE (Senior Researcher, Executive director, ESSEC-ISIS)<br />

14.00: Plenary session-Introduction of the theme for the afternoon<br />

How do we move from innovation to responsible innovation? What tools and approaches can we<br />

bring together? What is the current state of the science in this area? What challenges are there for<br />

their implementation? What current areas of emerging science and innovation can we apply these to,<br />

and how? Who should take these forward?<br />

14.10: Roundtable session<br />

Roundtable sessions will be run as case studies, each tackling a specific emerging area of science and<br />

innovation (a) Physical sciences and nanotechnology, (b) Health and life sciences, (c) Environment and<br />

low carbon energies, (d) Information technologies and communications, to answer the following<br />

questions :<br />

How do you define responsible innovation ?<br />

What key principles should underpin a responsible innovation approach?<br />

What have we learnt from experiences with this specific emerging area of technology ?<br />

What role do you, as individuals, does your organisation / institution have in the context of<br />

responsible innovation?<br />

How should we proceed?<br />

15.10: Rapporteurs feedback to plenary<br />

15.40: Coffee/tea break<br />

Session 3:<br />

<strong>Innovation</strong> and emerging technologies: opening up the debate<br />

Nikolas ROSE (Professor of Sociology - London School of Economics and Political Science)<br />

Manoelle LEPOUTRE (Senior Vice President, Sustainable Development and Environment, TOTAL)<br />

16.00: New technologies in society: opening up the debate<br />

Kathy SYKES (Professor of Science and Society, Bristol University)<br />

16.20: French experiences in public engagement around new technologies<br />

Jean-Luc PUJOL (Environment and society, INRA)<br />

16.40 Roundtable session - UK and French experiences compared in the field of dialogue and engagement<br />

concerning new technologies:<br />

Phil MACNAGHTEN (Professor of Geography, Durham University)<br />

Dominique PECCOUD (Membre de l’académie des technologies)<br />

Roundtable sessions will be run as case studies, each tackling a specific emerging area of science and<br />

innovation (a) Physical sciences and nanotechnology, (b) Health and life sciences, (c) Environment and<br />

low carbon energies, (d) Information technologies and communications, to answer the following<br />

questions :<br />

What engagement and dialogue activities have been done in each country?<br />

What have we learned and how should we proceed?<br />

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Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

17.20: Feedback from roundtables<br />

17.40: Wrap up and summary of day 1<br />

Andy STIRLING (Research Director at SPRU, Science and Technology Policy Research,<br />

University of Sussex)<br />

Pierre-Benoît JOLY (Senior Research Fellow INRA/SenS and IFRIS, Paris)<br />

18.00: End day 1<br />

Day 2<br />

Session 4<br />

<strong>Responsible</strong> and safe design<br />

Safe design of next generation nanomaterials as a case study<br />

Richard HANDY (School of biomedical and biological sciences, Plymouth)<br />

Daniel BLOCH (Medical advisor for nanomaterials, CEA)<br />

09.00: Safe design and public engagement around nanotechnologies<br />

Christophe VIEU (Professor of Physics and Researcher, LAAS, Toulouse)<br />

09.20: Beyond Nanoparticles: next generation nanomaterials. What are the next generation nanomaterials<br />

and in what sectors?<br />

Peter DOBSON (Director of Oxford University’s Begbroke Science Park, RCUK<br />

Nanotechnologies Champion)<br />

9.40: Designing in safety for next generation nanomaterials: learning from experiences with<br />

nanoparticles<br />

Ken DONALDSON (ELEGI Colt Laboratory, Edinburgh)<br />

10.00 : Safe design of next generation nanomaterials for consumer products<br />

Daniel BERNARD (Senior scientific advisor, ARKEMA)<br />

10.20: Coffee/tea break<br />

Session 5:<br />

Adaptive governance and regulation of disruptive innovation<br />

Catherine LARRIEU (Chef de délégation au développement durable, MEDDTL)<br />

10.40: Regulation of disruptive innovation: UK experiences<br />

Robert LEE (Co-director ESRC Centre on Business Relationships, Accountability, Sustainability<br />

and Society centre)<br />

11.00: French Experiences concerning the governance of new technologies<br />

Alexei GRINBAUM (Researcher, CEA Saclay)<br />

11.20: Governance of emerging technologies<br />

Steve RAYNER (Director of the Institute for Science, <strong>Innovation</strong> and Society, Oxford University,<br />

Saïd Business School)<br />

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Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

11.40: Roundtable session - UK and French experiences compared in the governance of specific areas of<br />

science and innovation<br />

Gary KASS (Principal Specialist in Strategic Futures, Natural England)<br />

Françoise RUSSO-MARIE (Diretor Génopôle d’Evry, Research Department)<br />

Roundtable sessions will be run as case studies, each tackling a specific emerging area of science and<br />

innovation (a) Physical sciences and nanotechnology, (b) Health and life sciences, (c) Environment and<br />

low carbon energies, (d) Information technologies and communications, to answer the following<br />

questions :<br />

<br />

<br />

<br />

What forms of governance and regulation have been applied in the area of emerging<br />

technology / innovation?<br />

What have we learned?<br />

What recommendations can we make?<br />

12.40: Feedback from roundtables<br />

13.00: Networking lunch<br />

Session 6:<br />

From concepts to practice: implementation<br />

Nicola GOLDBERG (Portfolio Manager, EPSRC, Engineering and Physical Science Research Council)<br />

Jean-Pierre CHEVALIER (Agence nationale pour la recherche)<br />

14.00: Plenary discussion - Introduction of the theme for the afternoon<br />

Learning from the discussions and presentations during the workshop, each roundtable is a ‘steering<br />

group’ for a new major R&D (part public and part private funded) initiative of 50M€ in one of the<br />

following areas: (a) next generation nanomaterials, (b) synthetic biology, (c) geoengineering, (d) next<br />

generation web technologies.<br />

They must decide what they will ask should be included in the programme to ensure a responsible<br />

innovation approach and identify challenges and barriers to implementation for actors in the process.<br />

15.00: Feedback from each group<br />

15.20: Coffee/tea break<br />

15.40: <strong>Workshop</strong> wrap-up<br />

Andy GIBBS (Head of Education, Economy, Business and Society Research team, ESRC,<br />

Economic and Social Research Centre)<br />

16.10: <strong>Workshop</strong> close<br />

Serge PLATTARD<br />

Maggy HEINTZ<br />

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Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

Biographical sketches<br />

Speakers and chairs<br />

Rémi BARRÉ<br />

Professor of Science Policy at CNAM (Conservatoire national des arts et métiers)<br />

Rémi BARRÉ holds a Civil Engineering degree (Ecole des Mines) and a Doctorate in Economics from the Ecole<br />

des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) (Paris).<br />

He is Professor of Science Policy at CNAM university and, since 2003, scientific advisor, to the Futuris - ANRT<br />

research and innovation policy think-tank. He has participated to several High level groups to the EU<br />

Commission; he has chaired the EU expert group on the indicators for the monitoring of the European<br />

Research Area (2009).<br />

He has been, from 2006 to 2009, head of the strategy and foresight unit of the General Directorate for<br />

Research and <strong>Innovation</strong> (DGRI) of the French Research and Higher Education Ministry (MESR); in this capacity<br />

he has been vice-chair of the working group of the Council of Strategic Analysis (CAS) which has produced the<br />

European Research Area vision report. He has been Director of the <strong>For</strong>esight unit of INRA (national institute for<br />

agronomic research) (2003-2006) and of the Observatoire des Sciences et des Techniques (OST) from 1990 to<br />

2001.<br />

Daniel BERNARD<br />

Senior Scientific Advisor for Nanotechnology and Sustainable Development - Arkema<br />

He graduated in 1968 from the Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Chimie de Paris. He earned a PhD in Chemistry<br />

and the Docteur ès Sciences Physiques degree in 1974 from the Pierre and Marie Curie University (Paris).<br />

Dr BERNARD entered the French Council for Scientific Research (CNRS), as research fellow (1970 – 1976). Then<br />

he joined the chemical branch of Elf Aquitaine Group in 1976, in various Research and Development positions.<br />

In 1992 he was R&D Director for the Elf Atochem Industrial Chemical Specialties Division, and in 1999 Elf<br />

Aquitaine R&D Vice president for North America. In 2002 he was appointed as Scientific and Technology Senior<br />

Advisor for ATOFINA.<br />

He is member of the High Level Group for Key Emerging Technologies at the DG Enterprise, and of the<br />

Nanofutures Platform of the DG Research of the European Commission. He is the french representative at the<br />

OECD Working Party on Manufactured Nanomaterials, member of the Nano Management Team of the<br />

European Chemical Industry Council (CEFIC) and Chairman of the Producer Association of Carbon nanoTubes in<br />

Europe (PACTE-CEFIC). Nanomaterials advisor for the Union des Industries chimiques (UIC), he is member of<br />

the Nanotechnology Scientific Committee of the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR), and chairman of the<br />

Working Group Nanotechnology of the Conseil National des Ingénieurs et Scientifiques de France (CNISF).<br />

He is heavily involved in standardization activities related to Nanotechnology and Nanomaterials as Chairman<br />

of the X457 Committee of AFNOR, secretary of CEN TC 352 and head of the french delegation for ISO TC 229.<br />

John BESSANT, BSc., PhD.<br />

Chair in <strong>Innovation</strong> and Entrepreneurship - Exeter University<br />

Associate Dean for Research and Knowledge Transfer - Exeter University<br />

Originally a chemical engineer, John has been active in the field of research and consultancy in technology and<br />

innovation management for over 25 years. He currently holds the Chair in <strong>Innovation</strong> and Entrepreneurship at<br />

Exeter University where he is also Associate Dean for Research and Knowledge Transfer. In 2003 he was<br />

awarded a Fellowship with the Advanced Institute for Management Research and was also elected a Fellow of<br />

the British Academy of Management. He has acted as advisor to various national governments and to<br />

international bodies including the United Nations, The World Bank and the OECD.<br />

He is a regular speaker at corporate events, conferences and centres such as Cranfield, the Irish Management<br />

Institute and the Scandinavian Management Institute. Consulting clients include Toyota, Novo-Nordisk, Lego,<br />

Morgan Stanley, Coloplast, Corus, Danfoss, GSK, Grundfos, Hewlett-Packard, Kumba Resources.<br />

He is the author of 15 books and many articles on the topic and has lectured and consulted widely around the<br />

world. His most recent books include ‘Managing innovation’ (awarded the ‘best book’ prize by the<br />

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Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

International Association for Management of Technology), ‘<strong>Innovation</strong> and entrepreneurship’ and ‘High<br />

involvement innovation’ (all published by John Wiley and Sons).<br />

Daniel BLOCH<br />

Medical advisor for nanomaterials - CEA<br />

Daniel Bloch, MD, graduated at the Medical School of Paris V and specialized in occupational health and<br />

radioprotection. He served as an occupational physician at CEA, the French Commission for atomic energy and<br />

alternative energies, for more than 20 years, focusing in particular on chemical risk management in<br />

microelectronics research laboratories. In the early 2000s’, the rapidly growing CEA nanotechnology research<br />

activities led him to address HSE issues related to nanomaterials. In 2008, he was appointed CEA medical<br />

advisor for nanomaterials. He was part of the expert groups driven in 2006 and 2008 by the French Agency for<br />

Environmental and Occupational Safety (AFSSET, recently merged in ANSES) and dedicated to Nanomaterials<br />

and health & environmental issues. He now contributes to the IReSP (Institute for Public Health Research), the<br />

French Observatory for Micro and Nanotechnologies (OMNT), the European Observatory for NanoSafety<br />

(EONS) and the European program NanoImpactNet. He is also involved in standardisation, contributing to the<br />

work of HSE groups within AFNOR, CEN and ISO. He regularly gives lectures within the INSTN (National<br />

Institute for Nuclear Science and Technology, part of the CEA), a higher education institution, during training<br />

sessions for radioprotection an safety engineers.<br />

Jean-Pierre CHEVALIER<br />

Responsable, Département Ingénierie, Procédés et Sécurité - Agence Nationale de la Recherche<br />

Jean-Pierre Chevalier first read physics and then obtained a Ph.D. (1977) from the University of Cambridge. He<br />

then joined the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) and was head of a major national<br />

metallurgy laboratory for over 12 years. He can probably be best described as a physicist working in the fields<br />

of metallurgy and materials science. He has extensive experience of electron microscopy of materials and,<br />

more specifically, has been involved in structural studies of disordered systems (metallic glasses and shortrange<br />

ordered alloys), heterogeneous materials (interfaces in semiconductors, metal-ceramic bonds,<br />

multilayers and other nanomaterials) and in structural studies of alloys. His recent interest lies in the analysis<br />

of materials requirements for sustainability (energy production, energy saving, reduction of CO 2 emissions and<br />

availability of mineral ressources). On leave from the CNRS, he was appointed to the chair of Industrial<br />

Materials at the Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers in Paris in 2000. In 2009, he joined the Agence<br />

Nationale de la Recherche as head of the Engineering, Processes and Security department. He has authored<br />

over 100 scientific publications.<br />

Peter DOBSON<br />

Director of Oxford University’s Begbroke Science Park<br />

After a career as a lecturer in Physics at Imperial College and Senior Principal Scientist at Philips Research<br />

laboratories he was appointed to a University Lectureship and College Fellowship at the Queen’s College<br />

Oxford in 1988 and a Professorship in 1996. At Oxford his research moved into the areas of nanoparticles,<br />

nanostructures, optoelectronics and biosensors. In 1999 he spun-off a company, now called Oxonica plc, that<br />

specializes in making nanoparticles for a wide range of applications, ranging from sunscreens to fuel additive<br />

catalysts and bio-labels. In 2000, with colleagues in Chemistry and Engineering, he spun-off Oxford Biosensors<br />

Ltd that made a hand-held device based on enzyme-functionalized microelectrode arrays. He was appointed to<br />

his present position in August 2002 and has the responsibility of setting up new research institutes that<br />

combine University activities with company R&D, and leading a team that facilitates the rapid transfer of<br />

technology and knowledge. This has led to him being in demand internationally to advise on Knowledge<br />

Transfer. He consults widely and advises several corporate and national organizations on nanotechnology. His<br />

research interests are very broad, covering most aspects of nanotechnology, and embracing biotechnology,<br />

environmental technology, energy, materials science, especially the applications to medicine. He is also<br />

currently(2009-2012) the Strategic Advisor on Nanotechnology to the Research Councils in the UK.<br />

P J Dobson, BSc, MA (Oxon), PhD, C Phys, F Inst P, Member of the ACS.<br />

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Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

Ken DONALDSON<br />

Professor of Respiratory Toxicology<br />

Scientific Director of the ELEGI Colt Laboratory - Queens Medical Research Insititute, University of Edinburgh<br />

Ken Donaldson (KD) is the Scientific Director of the ELEGI Colt Laboratory in the Queens Medical Research<br />

Insititute, University of Edinburgh, where he is Professor of Respiratory Toxicology. Ken is recognized as an<br />

expert in the mechanisms of lung disease caused by inhaled particles and fibres in ambient and workplace air.<br />

In this capacity he has provided expert opinion and consultancy to the US Environmental Protection Agency<br />

(North Carolina), US Health Effects Institute (Massachusetts), World Health Organisation, International Agency<br />

for Research on Cancer (Lyon France), WHO Air Quality and Health (Bonn, Germany), UK Medical Research<br />

Council, UK Health and Safety Executive, etc. Ken has sat on government committees pertaining to toxicology<br />

of air pollutants – Committee on the Medical Effects of Air Pollution (COMEAP) and Expert Panel on Air Quality<br />

Standards (EPAQS) and Advisory committee on Hazardous Substances. He has published over 300 scientific<br />

papers review and book chpaters on lung injury caused by inhaled particles and over 100 on ultrafine particles/<br />

nanoparticles. He currently has a research programme into the adverse effects of nanoparticles on the lungs<br />

and cardiovascular system, high aspect ratio nanoparticles and structure/toxicity relationships for<br />

nanoparticles. He is Founding Editor of the journal ‘Particle and Fibre Toxicology’ and Co-Editor of the<br />

textbook ‘Particle Toxicology’, (2007).<br />

Robert FALKNER<br />

Senior Lecturer in International Relations - London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) Senior<br />

Research Fellow - LSE Global Governance<br />

Dr Robert Falkner is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the London School of Economics and Political<br />

Science (LSE) and Senior Research Fellow at LSE Global Governance. He directs the Nanotechnology Policy and<br />

Regulation programme at LSE and in 2008-2009 coordinated an international research project on EU and US<br />

nanomaterials regulation, which resulted in the publication of the Chatham House report Securing the Promise<br />

of Nanotechnologies: Towards Transatlantic Regulatory Cooperation (2009). Robert holds Masters degrees in<br />

Politics and Economics from Munich University and a doctorate in International Relations from Oxford<br />

University. In 2006-07, he was a visiting scholar at Harvard University. He is the author of Business Power and<br />

Conflict in International Environmental Politics (Palgrave 2008) and editor of The International Politics of<br />

Genetically Modified Food: Diplomacy, Trade and Law (Palgrave 2007).<br />

Erik FISHER<br />

Assistant professor of Political Science - Arizona State University<br />

Erik Fisher is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Arizona State University. He holds a joint<br />

appointment in the School of Politics and Global Studies and the Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes.<br />

He serves as the Assistant Director for International Activities of the Center for Nanotechnology in Society<br />

(CNS-ASU). Fisher also serves as Principal Investigator of the STIR (Socio-Technical Integration Research)<br />

project, which coordinates over 20 laboratory engagement studies in a dozen nations and as co-leader of a<br />

CNS-ASU research thrust. Fisher’s research interests are in governance of emerging technologies, research<br />

policy, the public value of science, and midstream modulation. He co-edited the first volume of the Yearbook<br />

of Nanotechnology in Society and has published in Science and Public Policy, Scientometrics, Technology in<br />

Society and EMBO Reports. Fisher holds a Ph.D. in Environmental Studies (University of Colorado, Boulder), an<br />

MA in Classics (University of Colorado, Boulder) and a BA in Philosophy and Mathematics (St. John’s College,<br />

Annapolis).<br />

Andy GIBBS<br />

Head of the Education, Economy, Business and Society Research Team - ESRC<br />

Andy Gibbs has worked for the ESRC since 1981 in a range of roles, primarily in corporate activities. Between<br />

2007 and 2009 he was seconded to RCUK as a workstream lead in the project to establish a new Shared<br />

Services Centre for the Research Councils. Since January 2010, he has been the Head of the Education,<br />

Economy, Business and Society Research Team in the ESRC’s Research Directorate responsible for developing<br />

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Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

and commissioning research in these areas. He represents ESRC on the Cross-Council Nanotechnologies<br />

Coordination Group.<br />

Nicola GOLDBERG<br />

Portfolio Manager, EPSRC (Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council)<br />

Nicola Goldberg has worked at the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) for 5 years,<br />

most recently in the Nanotechnology and Healthcare Programmes. She currently coordinates EPSRC’s<br />

<strong>Responsible</strong> <strong>Innovation</strong> activity which has included a pilot study on how <strong>Responsible</strong> <strong>Innovation</strong> could be<br />

operationally implemented within our research funding activities.<br />

Alexei GRINBAUM<br />

Researcher - CEA-LARSIM - Saclay<br />

Alexei Grinbaum is a researcher at CEA-LARSIM located in Saclay near Paris. His main interest is in the<br />

philosophy of physics and the foundations of quantum mechanics. Since 2003 he has also been working on the<br />

ethical and social aspects of nanoscience and nanotechnology. Grinbaum's early publications in this area focus<br />

on the uncertainty of technological progress and the problem of governance, including a critique of the<br />

precautionary principle ("Living With Uncertainty: Toward a Normative Assessment of Nanotechnology",<br />

Techné 8(2):4-25, 2004), and on public perception of nanotechnology ("Cognitive Barriers in Perception of<br />

Nanotechnology," Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics, 34(4): 689-694, 2006). His later work bears on the<br />

question of narratives of nanotechnology ("The Nanotechnological Golem", Nanoethics, 4(3):191-198, 2010).<br />

He is a coordinator for France of the European observatory of nanotechnology, where his principal<br />

contribution is the Toolkit for Ethical Reflection and Communication on Nanotechnology<br />

(http://www.observatorynano.eu/project/catalogue/4ET).<br />

He is a frequent speaker at public debates on nanotechnology and science & society conferences both in<br />

France and internationally.<br />

Richard HANDY<br />

Director of the Ecotoxicology Research and <strong>Innovation</strong> Centre - University of Plymouth<br />

Professor Richard D. Handy is a fish toxicologist and comparative physiologist with 20+ years experience and is<br />

the Director of the Ecotoxicology Research and <strong>Innovation</strong> Centre at the University of Plymouth. The centre<br />

has a strong theme on nanoscience: (http://www.plymouth.ac.uk/research/eric). Professor Handy has<br />

published over 100 papers and book chapters on fish ecotoxicology, including about 20 papers on<br />

nanomaterials in the last 3 years. Prof. Handy is expert on the dietary uptake of contaminants in fish including<br />

methods for making diets containing nanomaterials, and protocols for in vivo exposure from the food. He is<br />

expert on epithelial biology/unstirred layer chemistry and the role of mucus in uptake across membranes; and<br />

has detailed expertise on membrane transport systems and mechanisms of uptake. His laboratory is<br />

recognised for in vitro organ perfusion techniques for measuring uptake (e.g. gut and gill perfusions in fish,<br />

other organs in mammals) and he is an expert histopathologist with an extensive archive of nanopathologies<br />

from different animals, and unique expertise on brain pathologies from nanomaterials in fish. His laboratory is<br />

currently investigating TiO 2 , Cu-NPs, Ag-NPs, SW-CNT, and C 60 . His work is supported by national level grants<br />

(e.g., Natural Environment Research Council, UK) and in EU partnerships (e.g., NanoImpactNet). He has written<br />

several reviews on manufactured NPS, edited special issues, reported on test methods to the UK government<br />

(founder member of the UK task force), and via the OECD working party on nanomaterials. He also has a<br />

clinical research programme that includes cardiotoxicology, and more recently the risks of nanomaterials in<br />

dentistry.<br />

Pierre-Benoît JOLY<br />

Economist and sociologist, Directeur de recherche at the National Institute of Agronomic Research (INRA)<br />

Pierre-Benoît Joly, economist and sociologist, is Directeur de recherche at the National Institute of Agronomic<br />

Research (INRA) in France. He holds a degree in agronomy (1982), a PhD in economics (1987) and the<br />

“Habilitation à diriger les recherches” (1995). He is the Director of the IFRIS (French Institute for Studies of<br />

Research and <strong>Innovation</strong> in Society).<br />

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Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

Since 1996, his research activities are focused on the governance of collective risks, socio-technical<br />

controversies, the use of scientific advice in public decision making and the forms of public participation in<br />

scientific activities. He was Member of the expert group “Science and Governance” at the European<br />

Commission, he is Member of the Council of European Association for the Study of Science and Technology<br />

(EASST) and of the French Comité de Prévention et de Précaution and he chairs the Scientific Council of the<br />

Programme on GMOs at the French Ministry for Ecology. He has published about one hundred articles (of<br />

which more than 50 in refereed journals), three books and he has coordinated five special issues of social<br />

sciences journals. He lectures at Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) on « Science, expertise<br />

and public debate » and at Sciences Po Paris on Risk Governance.<br />

Gary KASS<br />

Principal Specialist in Strategic Futures, Natural England<br />

Gary Kass is Principal Specialist in Strategic Futures at Natural England, the statutory adviser to the UK<br />

government on the natural environment in England. At Natural England, he is responsible for the design and<br />

delivery of a programme of futures-oriented analysis and synthesis on a range of issues that could affect the<br />

future of England’s natural environment. Among the critical challenges, he is examining the potential risks and<br />

opportunities offered from new and emerging areas of science and technology, exploring how the innovation<br />

system might seek to embed sustainability as a core part of its purpose.<br />

Before joining Natural England, Gary was Assistant Director in the Science and Society Directorate of the (then)<br />

Office of Science and <strong>Innovation</strong>, where he established and led a programme to engage members of the public<br />

in constructive dialogue on new and emerging areas of science and technology, and a programme of research<br />

to explore public attitudes towards science, engineering and technology.<br />

Before this Gary was head of the energy and environment programme at the Parliamentary Office of Science<br />

and technology, based in the Westminster Parliament. Here, he was responsible for a programme of work to<br />

inform parliamentary debate on issue arising at the interface of science and policy. Gary’s main work areas<br />

included environment, sustainability, energy and innovation policy.<br />

Gilles LAROCHE<br />

Head of the Unit "Ethics and Gender" - Directorate General for Research and <strong>Innovation</strong> - European<br />

Commission<br />

Since January <strong>2011</strong>, Gilles Laroche is the Head of the Unit "Ethics and Gender" of the Directorate General for<br />

Research and <strong>Innovation</strong> of the European Commission. This Unit is responsible for the management of the<br />

"Science in Society" programme which covers public engagement and participation of citizens and civil society<br />

organisations in the research and innovation process, gender equality, science education, access to scientific<br />

results, science communication, ethics and governance.<br />

Gilles Laroche is a lawyer and he joined the European Commission (Directorate General for Agriculture) in<br />

1991. From 1993 to 1996, he worked at the Joint Research Centre in Ispra (Italy). Returning to Brussels in<br />

1996, he continued his career in the Directorate General for Research and <strong>Innovation</strong> in the "Biotechnology"<br />

programme until 2003 when he was appointed Head of the Unit "Internal Control". In 2006, he became Head<br />

of the Unit responsible for "Strategic Planning and Programming".<br />

Catherine LARRIEU<br />

Head of the Delegation for Sustainable Development, Commissioner General for Sustainable Development<br />

(Department of Ecology, Sustainable Development, Transportation and Housing)<br />

<strong>For</strong>mer student of Ecole Polytechnique (1980-1983) and holder of a DEA in economics, Catherine Larrieu is<br />

Chief Engineer of Bridges, Water and <strong>For</strong>estry. She has held several positions at the Ministry of Agriculture<br />

from 1985 to 1989, departmental and regional level.<br />

In 1989, she joined the National Agency for Promotion of Research (Anvar). First « chargé d'affaires » (account<br />

manager) in Rhône-Alpes for the agri-food, she then coordinated national expansion to all areas of technology<br />

development networks, associative structures for SME support co-financed by the State and regions, and<br />

developed in Nord-Pas de Calais a cross-border cooperation in the field of materials and surface treatments.<br />

Appointed Regional Director Anvar Nord-Pas de Calais in 1999, she set up partnerships with the Regional<br />

Council, the State services and socio-economic organizations, in the form of operational and financial support<br />

10


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

innovation of SMEs. Catherine Larrieu joined in 2005 the general direction of the new OSEO group, born from<br />

the merger of Anvar and BDPME, until 2007. She prepared the enlargement of the activity of the ex-Anvar,<br />

both in relation to mid-sized companies than to the clusters.<br />

After two missions within the General Inspectorate of Finance, she was appointed Head of the Delegation for<br />

Sustainable Development in August 2008 in the Commissioner General for Sustainable Development recently<br />

established. The Delegation for Sustainable Development develops missions pulse, business intelligence and<br />

monitoring for the consideration of sustainable development into all policies and with actors of civil society.<br />

She participates in the Grenelle de l’Environment, which coordinates the monitoring by the National<br />

Committee on Sustainable Development and Environment Round Table, involving all stakeholders and chaired<br />

by the Minister. It also develops the consultations on the conditions for a transition to an economy both<br />

greener and more equitable central axis of the National Strategy for Sustainable Development adopted in<br />

2010.<br />

Robert LEE<br />

Co-Director of the ESRC Centre on Business Relationships, Accountability, Sustainability and Society (BRASS)<br />

Professor Robert Lee has been Head of Cardiff Law School, and is currently a Co-Director of the ESRC Centre on<br />

Business Relationships, Accountability, Sustainability and Society (BRASS) (www.brass.cardiff.ac.uk) which<br />

works on issues of business and sustainability/social responsibility. He is a professional development<br />

consultant with the Environment Products and Regulation Group of the European law firm, Freshfields<br />

Bruckhaus Deringer. Bob has a book on the regulation of biomedicine and another on food regulation. As part<br />

of a team from the Society of Environmental Toxicologists and Chemists, he has contributed to a guide to<br />

environmental standard setting. He has undertaken work for government in the UK on both regulation and self<br />

regulation as it relates to nanomaterials and is currently working on a guide to nanomaterials’ regulation for<br />

the British Standards Institution. He is an honorary life member of the UK Environmental Law Association and a<br />

Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine.<br />

Manoelle LEPOUTRE<br />

Senior Vice President, Sustainable Development and Environment, TOTAL<br />

Manoelle Lepoutre is Senior Vice President, Sustainable Development and Environment, Member of the Total<br />

Management Committee since June 2009.<br />

She began her career for Elf in Exploration and Production Research & Development, where she was in charge<br />

of Basin Modelling (petroleum evaluation of sedimentary basins and of exploration prospects).<br />

She had then several positions in Exploration, as an operational geologist in France and then getting<br />

progressively larger responsibilities, as Area Exploration Manager in The Netherlands, Vice President<br />

Exploration in Norway for Elf, then Vice President Geosciences in the US for Total, from 2000 to 2003 before<br />

being assigned Vice President Research and Development for Total Exploration and Production in 2004.<br />

Manoelle Lepoutre is a graduate from « École Nationale Supérieure de Géologie de Nancy » (France) and from<br />

the French Petroleum Institute High School (ENSPM).<br />

Phil MACNAGHTEN<br />

Professor of Geography - Durham University<br />

Phil Macnaghten is Professor of Geography at Durham University. His research has concentrated on the<br />

governance of science and technology, the study of socio-nature, public deliberation, comparative research,<br />

and qualitative methodology with a particular emphasis on discourse and narrative approaches. His principal<br />

publications include: Contested Natures (Sage, 1998), Bodies of Nature (Sage, 2001), Governing at the<br />

Nanoscale (Demos, 2006), Reconfiguring Responsibility (European Commission, 2009) as well as a number of<br />

edited collections and papers. He contributes to debates on the governance of science and technology in the<br />

UK, Europe and Brazil and is currently is a member of the UK’s Engineering and Physical Science Research<br />

Council’s (EPSRC) Societal Issues Panel.<br />

11


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

Richard OWEN<br />

Chair in <strong>Responsible</strong> <strong>Innovation</strong>, Environment and Health - University of Exeter Business School<br />

Professor Owen holds a Chair in <strong>Responsible</strong> <strong>Innovation</strong>, Environment and Health at the University of Exeter<br />

Business School, where he sits in the School of Management. He holds a joint appointment with the European<br />

Centre for Environment and Human Health. His primary research involves understanding the responsible<br />

emergence of disruptive innovation and new technologies in democratic society. He has worked closely with<br />

the UK Research Councils in this regard, including current funding from ESRC and EPSRC to develop a<br />

<strong>Responsible</strong> <strong>Innovation</strong> Framework for operational use by them. In previous roles he led on emerging risks in<br />

his capacity as Head of Environment and Human Health at the Environment Agency (UK) and as Chair of the<br />

OECD Steering Group on Risk Assessment of Nanomaterials. He has a background in risk assessment,<br />

governance and regulation, working at the interface between disciplines to support national and international<br />

policy development.<br />

Xavier PAVIE<br />

Researcher and Lecturer in innovation management and strategy at ESSEC Business School<br />

Xavier Pavie is the Executive Director of the Institute for Service <strong>Innovation</strong> & Strategy (ESSEC). Graduate in<br />

business science as well as in philosophy, Mr. Pavie has held executive position in leading companies such as<br />

Unilever and Nestlé for fifteen years. After several years as a Marketing Director at Club Med especially<br />

focusing on innovation, he has decided to join academia to strengthen the team of ESSEC in innovation<br />

management.<br />

Mr. Pavie's publications and public appearances emphasise philosophical approaches on responsibleinnovation<br />

as a source of innovation and performance. He published several articles and books in philosophy<br />

(about spirituals exercises) and also in innovation.<br />

Dominique PECCOUD<br />

<strong>For</strong>mer Special Adviser to the Director-General of the International Labour Organization for Socio-Religious<br />

affairs (1996-2008)<br />

Dominique Peccoud, a French Jesuit born in 1946, has been Special Adviser to the Director-General of the<br />

International Labour Organization for Socio-Religious affairs from 1996 to 2008. In addition to this position, he<br />

was in charge of managing relations between the ILO and Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs).<br />

A member of the French Academy of Agriculture and of the French National Academy of Engineering,<br />

D. Peccoud advises public and private organizations on the ethical dimensions of social and economic issues<br />

regarding the application of new technologies. Prior to joining the ILO, he was President of a technological<br />

graduate school in Toulouse (France). Earlier times he was lecturing at the PARIS VII University and was<br />

headmaster of the "Ecole Sainte Geneviève", a famous college in Versailles.<br />

Dr. Peccoud holds a doctorate in theoretical computer science from the Sorbonne in Paris and master's<br />

degrees in philosophy and theology.<br />

Judith PETTS<br />

Dean of Social and Human Sciences - University of Southampton<br />

Professor Judith Petts is Dean of Social and Human Sciences at the University of Southampton a post she has<br />

held since October 2010. The Faculty is a £55m activity crossing subjects as diverse as Maths and Social Policy<br />

with over 5000 students and 450 staff. Prior to this she was Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Research and Knowledge<br />

Transfer, at the University of Birmingham (2007-10) and Head of the School of Geography, Earth and<br />

Environmental Sciences, from 2001-2007. She was also Director of the Centre for Environmental Research and<br />

Training, and as at Southampton, held the Chair of Environmental Risk Management. Prior to joining<br />

Birmingham (1999) she was Director of the Centre for Hazard and Risk Management, Loughborough<br />

University.<br />

Judith has over 30 years applied strategic interdisciplinary research experience in the broad area of<br />

environmental risk management Her research spans three primary areas: environmental governance and<br />

policy-making, science-society relationships, and public perceptions, responses and behavior. She has acted as<br />

12


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

a government advisor across multiple Departments and Agencies and also as a special advisor to the House of<br />

Commons and House of Lords. She was a member of Council of the Natural Environment Research Council<br />

(2000-6).<br />

Judith is currently a Member of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution, a Member of EPSRC’s Societal<br />

Issues Panel, and of the Steering Group of the Sciencewise Expert Resource Centre.<br />

Jean-Luc PUJOL<br />

INRA, National Institute of Agronomy<br />

Jean-Luc Pujol is a former student of Ecole Normale Superieure and graduated from ENGREF, school of<br />

management in agronomy, forestry, water and environmental science and technology. He was science and<br />

technology adviser at the Center for Strategic Analysis for 4 years. He now works at the National Institute of<br />

Agronomy where he is in charge of a mission of anticipation in the relation between science and society. He<br />

was a moderator of a panel of experts mobilised as support for the special commission of public debate on<br />

nanotechnology.<br />

Steve RAYNER<br />

James Martin Professor of Science and Civilization<br />

Director of the Institute for Science, <strong>Innovation</strong> and Society - Oxford University’s Saïd Business School<br />

Steve Rayner is James Martin Professor of Science and Civilization and Director of the Institute for Science,<br />

<strong>Innovation</strong> and Society at Oxford University’s Saïd Business School, from where he also directs the Oxford<br />

Programme for the Future of Cities and Co-directs the Oxford Geoengineering Programme. He is also Honorary<br />

Professor of Climate Change and Society at the University of Copenhagen. He previously held senior research<br />

positions in two US National Laboratories and has taught at leading US universities. He has served on various<br />

US, UK, and international bodies addressing science, technology and the environment, including Britain’s Royal<br />

Commission on Environmental Pollution, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the Royal<br />

Society’s Working Group on Climate Geoengineering. Until 2008 he also directed the national Science in<br />

Society Research Programme of the Economic and Social Research Council. He was included in the 2008 Smart<br />

List by Wired Magazine as “one of the 15 people the next US President should listen to”.<br />

Arie RIP<br />

Technology Assessment of Nanotechnology - University of Twente<br />

Arie Rip was educated as a chemist and philosopher at the University of Leiden. In the 1970s, he set up and led a<br />

program of teaching and research in Chemistry and Society in that University. He was Professor of Science<br />

Dynamics at the University of Amsterdam (1984-1987) and Professor of Philosophy of Science and Technology at<br />

the University of Twente (1987-2006) where he continues after his retirement. He holds a Visiting Professorship<br />

at the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa. Currently, he leads a research program on Technology Assessment<br />

of Nanotechnology (as part of the Dutch R&D Consortium NanoNed). His other main research interests are the<br />

changes in knowledge production and the future of science institutions.<br />

Nikolas ROSE<br />

Professor of Sociology - London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)<br />

Director of the BIOS Centre for the Study of Bioscience, Biomedicine, Biotechnology and Society<br />

Nikolas Rose is Martin White Professor of Sociology, and Director of the BIOS Centre for the Study of<br />

Bioscience, Biomedicine, Biotechnology and Society at the London School of Economics and Political Science.<br />

He is also co-PI for the LSE-Imperial College Centre for Synthetic Biology and <strong>Innovation</strong> (CSynBI). His most<br />

recent books are The Politics of Life Itself : Biomedicine, Power, and Subjectivity in the Twenty-First Century<br />

(Princeton, 2006) and (with Peter Miller) Governing The Present (Polity, 2008). The outcome of his recent<br />

research with Joelle Abi-Rached on the political, social, legal and economic implications of recent<br />

developments in the brain sciences will be published as Neuro: the New Brain Sciences and the Remaking of<br />

the Human (Princeton, 2012). He is co-editor of BioSocieties: an interdisciplinary journal for social studies of<br />

the life sciences, Chair of the European Neuroscience and Society Network, and a member of numerous<br />

advisory groups including the Nuffield Council on Bioethics.<br />

13


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

Françoise RUSSO-MARIE<br />

Research Director at INSERM ( French National Health and Medical Research Institute)<br />

Director of the Genopole® research department<br />

Françoise Russo-Marie obtained her MD and PhD at the University of Paris VII and holds the title of Research<br />

Director of INSERM (French National Health and Medical Research Institute). She has been appointed as<br />

director of the Genopole® research department. She has been chair of an INSERM Research Unit for 12 years,<br />

has created and led a biotechnology company where she worked as CEO and CSO, has monitored and<br />

evaluated 2 of the major French Institutes of Research.<br />

Françoise Russo-Marie research activities were developed in the domain of cell biology, with the aim of<br />

understanding the mechanisms of corticosteroids in inflammatory diseases. She has contributed to the<br />

discovery of annexins and devoted most of her research to study structure-function relationships of annexins.<br />

Jack STILGOE<br />

Senior Policy Adviser, Royal Society<br />

Jack Stilgoe is Senior Policy Adviser at the Royal Society, where he looks after work on science, innovation and<br />

governance. Before the Royal Society, he spent four years at the independent think tank Demos, leading work<br />

on science and society. He is author of Citizen Scientists (Demos, 2008) Nanodialogues (Demos, 2007), The<br />

Received Wisdom (Demos, 2006) and The Public Value of Science (Demos, 2005). He has published academic<br />

papers in the journals Science and Public Policy, Public Understanding of Science and Science, Technology and<br />

Human Values. He is on the editorial board of Public Understanding of Science. He is an honorary research<br />

fellow of University College London and a Demos associate.<br />

Andy STIRLING<br />

Professor of Science and Technology Policy - Research Director at SPRU (Science and Technology Policy<br />

Research) - University of Sussex<br />

Andy Stirling is Professor of Science and Technology Policy and Research Director at SPRU (science and<br />

technology policy research) at the University of Sussex, where he co-directs the ESRC Centre on 'Social,<br />

Technological and Environmental Pathways to Sustainability' (STEPS; jointly with IDS) and the Sustainable<br />

Lifestyles Research Group (SLRG; jointly with Surrey). He has a background in natural and social science,<br />

working formerly as an archaeologist, then a disarmament and environment activist. <strong>For</strong> twenty years, he has<br />

been an interdisciplinary researcher and policy adviser, focusing on challenges in the governance of science,<br />

technology and innovation – including: ‘risk’, ‘uncertainty’ and ‘precaution’; ‘sustainablity’, ‘resilience’ and<br />

‘diversity’; and ‘participation’, ‘transformation’ and ‘power’. He has published widely on these issues and<br />

served on several public advisory bodies including EU committees on Energy Policy, Science in Society, Public<br />

Engagement, Sustainable Development, Science Governance. In the UK, he has served on the Advisory<br />

Committee on Toxic Substances, GM Science Review Panel, DEFRA Science Advisory Council and the BIS<br />

Sciencewise Expert Group – as well as working groups for the Royal Society and Nuffield Council on Bioethics.<br />

Kathy SYKES – OBE<br />

Professor of Sciences and Society at the University of Bristol<br />

Since 2002, Kathy has worked on culture shift in Universities, funding bodies and Government, helping<br />

improve dialogue with the public, to make better policy decisions and do better research.<br />

Kathy has sat, or sits, on strategic panels in public engagement in science for many funders of science and<br />

learned societies, for examples the Royal Society, the Wellcome Trust, and the EPSRC. She was a member of<br />

the Council for Science and Technology, the government's top advisory body on science and technology policy<br />

issues, advising the Prime Minister from 2004-2010. She chairs the 'Sciencewise' Strategy Group, which aims to<br />

increase and improve public dialogue on science and technology across Government Departments and<br />

Agencies.<br />

She helped to create the hands-on science centre Explore AtBristol, the Times Cheltenham Science Festival and<br />

NESTA Famelab - a national, but increasingly international, competition which talent-spots and trains new<br />

science communicators. She presents television science programmes and comments in the media about<br />

14


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

science. Her PhD is in Physics.<br />

Christophe VIEU<br />

Professor of physics - INSA Toulouse<br />

Researcher - LAAS-CNRS and ITAV, Centre Pierre Potier<br />

Christophe Vieu, PhD in solid state physics is professor of physics at the National Institute of Applied Sciences<br />

(INSA), an Enginnering school of Toulouse. He is conducting research in the field of Nanobiotechnologies in the<br />

Laboratory of Architecture and Analysis of Systems (LAAS) of CNRS organisation. Main fields of interest are:<br />

Nanopatterning, Biopatterning, Nanoscale devices and tools for biodetection and medecine, education in<br />

Nanotechnologies. He recently joined an interdisciplinary research and industrial transfert Institute (ITAV) of<br />

the Toulouse Canceropole.<br />

Author of more than 150 publications in international conference proceedings, journals and books, he has<br />

been involved in several European projects and international cooperations.<br />

15


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

Contact details<br />

SPEAKERS/CHAIRS<br />

BARRE Remi CNAM remi.barre@cnam.fr<br />

292 rue Saint-Martin<br />

F-75141 Paris Cédex 03<br />

BERNARD Daniel ARKEMA daniel.bernard@arkema.com<br />

Scientific Senior Advisor 33 (0)1 49 00 78 73<br />

Direction Recherche Developpement<br />

420 Rue D'Estienne D'Orves<br />

Colombes F-92705<br />

BESSANT John Director of Research johnrbessant@googlemail.com<br />

Professor of <strong>Innovation</strong> and Entrepreneurship<br />

University of Exeter Business School<br />

Streatham Court<br />

Streatham Campus<br />

University of Exeter<br />

Exeter<br />

EX4 4ST<br />

BLOCH Daniel Medical advisor for nanomaterials daniel.bloch@cea.fr<br />

CEA-Grenoble Services de maîtrise des<br />

risques/GMR 33 (0)4 38 78 35 46<br />

17, rue des Martyrs<br />

38054 Grenoble cedex 9<br />

CHEVALIER Jean-Pierre<br />

Responsable du dpt Ingénierie, Procédés et<br />

Sécurité<br />

Jean-pierre.CHEVALIER@agencerecherche.fr<br />

Agence Nationale de la Recherche<br />

212, rue de Bercy<br />

75012 Paris<br />

DOBSON Peter Academic Director of Begbroke Science Park, peter.dobson@eng.ox.ac.uk<br />

University of Oxford, 44 (0)1865 283780<br />

Sandy Lane,<br />

Kidlington,<br />

Oxon, OX5 1PF<br />

DONALDSON Ken ELEGI Colt Laboratory ken.donaldson@ed.ac.uk<br />

Centre for Inflammation Research, 44 (0)131 651 1437<br />

Medical School, University of Edinburgh,<br />

Edinburgh, Midlothian<br />

EH 8 9AG<br />

FALKNER Robert Senior Lecturer in International Relations R.Falkner@lse.ac.uk<br />

Senior Research Fellow, LSE Global Governance 44 (0)20 7955 6347<br />

London School of Economics<br />

Houghton Street<br />

London WC2A 2AE<br />

FISHER Erik Assistant Professor of Political Science efisher1@asu.edu<br />

School of Politics and Global Studies (480) 965-9744<br />

Arizona State University<br />

GIBBS Andy Head of Educ., Economy, Busi. and Soc. Res. Team Andy.Gibbs@esrc.ac.uk<br />

Economic and Social Research Council 44 (0)1793413103<br />

Polaris House<br />

North Star Avenue<br />

Swindon SN2 1UJ<br />

16


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

GOLDBERG Nicola Portfolio Manager Nicola.Goldberg@epsrc.ac.uk<br />

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research<br />

Council 44 (0)1793444475<br />

Polaris House<br />

North Star Avenue<br />

Swindon<br />

SN2 1ET<br />

GRINBAUM Alexei CEA-Saclay alexei.grinbaum@cea.fr<br />

SPEC/LARSIM (bât. 774) 33 (0)1 69 08 12 17<br />

91191 Gif-sur-Yvette Cedex, France<br />

HANDY Richard School of Biomedical and Biological Sciences R.Handy@plymouth.ac.uk<br />

Davy Building, University of Plymouth, Drake<br />

Circus, 44 (0)1752 584630<br />

Plymouth, Devon, PL4 8AA<br />

JOLY Pierre-Benoît Directeur de l'IFRIS joly@inra-ifris.org<br />

Institut Francilien Recherche, <strong>Innovation</strong> et<br />

Société<br />

Cité Descartes<br />

5 boulevard Descartes<br />

Champs sur Marne<br />

77454 Marne-la-Vallée Cedex 2<br />

KASS Gary Principal Specialist gary.kass@naturalengland.org.uk<br />

Strategy and Environmental Futures 44 (0)7920756743<br />

Natural England<br />

LARRIEU Catherine Ministry of Ecology, Sustainable Development,<br />

Catherine.LARRIEU@developpementdurable.gouv.fr<br />

Transport and Housing (MEDDTL) 33 (0)1 40 81 34 64<br />

Office of the Commissioner General for<br />

Sustainable Development<br />

Head of the Sustainable Development Delegation<br />

3 place de Fontenoy<br />

75007 Paris<br />

LAROCHE Gilles Chef de l'Unité "Gouvernance et éthique" Gilles.Laroche@ec.europa.eu<br />

Direction générale de la Recherche (32-2) 299 11 22<br />

Commission européenne<br />

Square de Meeûs 8, BE-1050 BRUXELLES<br />

LEE Robert Centre for Busi. Relationships, Account., LeeRG@cf.ac.uk<br />

Sustain. and Soc. 44 (0)29 208 74352<br />

Cardiff University<br />

55 Park Place<br />

Cardiff<br />

CF10 3AT<br />

LEPOUTRE Manoelle Directeur du Développement durable et de l’Envir. manoelle.lepoutre@total.com<br />

Total<br />

2, place Jean Millier<br />

La Défense 6<br />

92078 Paris La Défense Cedex<br />

Founding Director of the Inst. of Hazard and Risk<br />

MACNAGHTEN Philip Res.<br />

p.m.macnaghten@durham.ac.uk<br />

Durham University 44 (0) 191 33 41990<br />

Department of Geography<br />

Science Laboratories<br />

South Road, Durham<br />

DH1 3LE, UK<br />

OWEN Richard University of Exeter Business School r.j.owen@exeter.ac.uk<br />

Streatham Court 44 (0)7875 205915<br />

Rennes Drive<br />

Exeter<br />

17


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

EX4 4PU<br />

PAVIE Xavier Directeur Exécutif ESSEC-ISIS pavie@essec.edu<br />

ESSEC-ISIS 33 (0)1 34 43 36 21<br />

ESSEC Business School<br />

Av. Bernard Hirsch<br />

B.P. 50105<br />

95021 Cergy Pontoise Cedex<br />

PECCOUD Dominique Académie des technologies dpeccoud@gmail.com<br />

Grand Palais des Champs Elysées - Porte C<br />

Avenue Franklin D. Roosevelt<br />

75008 Paris<br />

PETTS Judith Dean, Social and Human Sciences J.Petts@soton.ac.uk<br />

University of Southampton 44 (0)23 8059 5663<br />

Member ex Royal Commission on Envir. Pollution<br />

Murray Building<br />

Southampton<br />

SO17 1BJ<br />

PUJOL Jean-Luc INRA : MaR/S jeanlucpujol@aol.com<br />

Mission d'anticipation Rech./Soc. & Dév. durable 33 (0)1 42 75 91 17<br />

147 rue de l'Université<br />

75338 Paris Cedex 07<br />

RAYNER Steve Director, Institute for Science, Innov. and Society steve.rayner@sbs.ox.ac.uk<br />

Keble College 44 (0)1865288938<br />

Oxford<br />

OX1 3PG<br />

RIP Arie Professor of Philosophy of Science and Technology a.rip@utwente.nl<br />

School of Management and Governance (053) 489 4026<br />

University of Twente<br />

MB-STePS<br />

PO Box 217<br />

7500 AE Enschede<br />

ROSE Nikolas Department of Sociology n.rose@lse.ac.uk<br />

Martin White Professor of Sociology 44 (0)20 7955 7533<br />

BIOS (Centre for the study of Bioscience,<br />

Biomedicine, Biotechnology and Society)<br />

London School of Economics<br />

RUSSO-MARIE Françoise Director Genopole Research Francoise.Russo-Marie@genopole.fr<br />

5, Rue Henri Desbruères 33 (0)1 60 87 84 42<br />

91 030 Evry Cedex - France<br />

STILGOE Jack Science Policy team jack.stilgoe@royalsociety.org<br />

Royal Society 44 (0)20 7451 2530<br />

6-9 Carlton House Terrace<br />

London SW1Y 5AG<br />

STIRLING Andy The Sussex Energy Group a.c.stirling@sussex.ac.uk<br />

University of Sussex 44 (0)1273 877118<br />

Brighton<br />

SYKES Kathy Professor of Sciences and Society Kathy.Sykes@bristol.ac.uk<br />

Institute for Advanced Studies<br />

The Royal <strong>For</strong>t House<br />

University of Bristol<br />

Bristol, BS8 1UJ<br />

VIEU Christophe LAAS-CNRS cvieu@laas.fr<br />

Groupe NBS- Nanobiosystèmes 33 (0)5 61 33 69 65<br />

7, avenue du Colonel Roche<br />

31077 Toulouse Cedex 4<br />

18


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

ATTENDEES<br />

AMOUROUX Jacques Chimie Paris Tech jacquesamouroux@gmail.com<br />

Dpt de Chemical Engineering UPMC/ENSCP jacques-amouroux@chimie-paristech.fr<br />

11, rue Pierre et Marie Curie 33 (0)1 44 27 68 14<br />

75231 Paris cedex 05<br />

BORDE Jacques 4 rue de Messine jaborde@free.fr<br />

75008 Paris France 33 (0)6 81 90 78 12<br />

CAPDEVILA Jean-Marc Conseiller nucléaire jean-marc.capdevila@cea.fr<br />

French Embassy 44 (0)20 7073 1067<br />

CHIOCCA Massimo Area Responsabilità Sociale delle Imprese mchiocca@lavoroetico.org<br />

CSR Dept. 0543-38233<br />

Centro per l'Innovazione e lo Sviluppo Economico<br />

Corso della Repubblica, 5<br />

I - 47100 <strong>For</strong>lì<br />

CLAES Merel Research Assistant merel@edcw.org<br />

Ecodesign Centre 44 (0)29 2064 7034<br />

Cardiff Business Technology Centre,<br />

Senghennydd Road,<br />

Cardiff<br />

CF24 4AY<br />

COLEMAN Andrea Director andrea.coleman@youngfoundation.org<br />

The Young Foundation 44 (0) 20 8821 2852<br />

18 Victoria Park Square<br />

Bethnal Green<br />

LONDON E2 9PF<br />

COPE David POST coped@parliament.uk<br />

7 Millbank 44(0)2072192848<br />

Westminster<br />

London<br />

SW1P 3JA<br />

DELACOTE Goery CEO gd@at-bristol.org.uk<br />

At Bristol 44 (0)1179157156<br />

Anchor road<br />

Harbourside<br />

Bristol<br />

BS1 5DB<br />

DELACOTE Stéphane Administrateur de la fondation de l'ecole stephane.delacote@gmail.com<br />

des mines FI3M 44 (0)20 3239 2321<br />

Observatoire de l'innovation responsable<br />

DESWARTE Fabien Science and <strong>Innovation</strong> Network Fabien.Deswarte@fco.gov.uk<br />

British Embassy 33 (0)1 44 51 33 31<br />

35 rue faubourg saint honoré<br />

75008 Paris<br />

DOUBLEDAY Robert Senior Research Associate rvld2@cam.ac.uk<br />

Department of Geography 44 (0)1223 760 563<br />

University of Cambridge<br />

Downing Place<br />

Cambridge CB2 3EN<br />

ELWOOD Paul Leeds University p.ellwood@leeds.ac.uk<br />

Management of emerging technologies<br />

GENTHON Bénédicte Economic Counsellor Benedicte.GENTHON@dgtresor.gouv.fr<br />

French Embassy 442 070 731 181<br />

58, Knightsbridge<br />

London SW1X 7JT<br />

19


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

GIUSSANI Donatella London Representation d.giussani@hotmail.com<br />

Observatory for <strong>Responsible</strong> <strong>Innovation</strong><br />

GROVES Chris Research Associate GrovesC1@cardiff.ac.uk<br />

ESRC Centre for Business Relationships, 44 (0) 2920 877438<br />

Accountability, Sustainability and Society<br />

Cardiff University<br />

55 Park Place<br />

Cardiff<br />

CF10 3AT<br />

GULBRANDSEN Elisabeth Special Adviser egu@rcn.no<br />

Department for Analysis and Development 4 793 413 355<br />

Division for <strong>Innovation</strong><br />

The Research Council of Norway<br />

HILL Steven Head of RCUK Strategy Unit steven.hill@rcuk.ac.uk<br />

Polaris House 44 (0)1793 444400<br />

North Star Avenue<br />

Swindon SN2 1ET<br />

HITCHCOCK Julian Senior Associate Julian.hitchcock@ffw.com<br />

Field Fisher Waterhouse LLP 44 (0)20 7861 4690<br />

KANELLOPOULOU Maria Political Officer Marie-Madeleine.Kanellopoulou@ec.europa.eu<br />

Rep. of the European Commission to the UK 44(0)20 79731980<br />

32 Smith Square<br />

London SW1P 3EU<br />

KEARNES Matthew Department of Geography M.B.Kearnes@durham.ac.uk<br />

Durham University 44 (0) 191 334 1873<br />

Durham, DH1 3LE<br />

KITNEY Richard Professor of BioMedical Systems Engineering r.kitney@imperial.ac.uk<br />

Department of Bioengineering 44 (0)20 7594 5184<br />

Imperial College London<br />

South Kensington Campus<br />

London, SW7 2AZ<br />

KURT Aygen Ethical Governance of Emerging Tech. Project a.kurt@mdx.ac.uk<br />

School of Engineering and Information Sciences<br />

Middlesex University<br />

The Burroughs<br />

Hendon<br />

London NW4 4BT<br />

LACOSTE Annalivia Observatory for <strong>Responsible</strong> <strong>Innovation</strong> annalivia.lacoste@mines-paristech.fr<br />

Mines ParisTech 33 (0)1.40.51.92.86<br />

Fondation des Industries Minérales, Minières<br />

et Métallurgiques Françaises<br />

Centre de Sociologie de l'<strong>Innovation</strong><br />

Paris, J.204<br />

LA PORTA Filomena EDF Energy Filomena.LaPorta@edfenergy.com<br />

Head of UK R&D Partnerships<br />

Walter House<br />

418 - 422 Strand<br />

London, WC2R 0PT<br />

LARKIN Ken Chief Executive klarkin@rvc.ac.uk<br />

London BioScience <strong>Innovation</strong> Centre 44 (0) 20 7691 2076<br />

2, Royal College Street<br />

London<br />

NW1 0NH<br />

LLEWELLYN Ian Queen Mary ipl@dcs.qmul.ac.uk<br />

University of London 44 (0)2078828021<br />

Mile End Road<br />

London<br />

20


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

E1 4NS<br />

MacEWEN Alison Science and <strong>Innovation</strong> Network Alison.MacEwen@fco.gov.uk<br />

British Embassy<br />

35 rue faubourg saint honoré<br />

75008 Paris<br />

MAGOCSI Laszlo Science & Technology Attaché LMagocsi@mfa.gov.hu<br />

Embassy of the Republic of Hungary 44 (0)20 7201 3456<br />

35 Eaton Place<br />

London SW1X 8BZ<br />

MARRIS Claire Senior Research Fellow C.Marris@lse.ac.uk<br />

BIOS (Centre for the Study of Bioscience, Biomed.,<br />

Biotechnology and Society)<br />

London School of Economics and Political Science<br />

Houghton Street, London, WC2A 2AE, UK<br />

McHUGH Shane The Royal Academy of Engineering shane.mchugh@raeng.org.uk<br />

3 Carlton House Terrace 44 (0)20 7766 0600<br />

London SW1Y 5DG<br />

MILLS Peter Assistant Director dmills@nuffieldbioethics.org<br />

Nuffield Council on Bioethics 44 (0)20 7681 9619<br />

28 Bedford Square, London, WC1B 3JS<br />

REMOLA Stephanie Senior Policy Manager stephanie.remola@esrc.ac.uk<br />

UK NCP for the Science in Society programme<br />

(FP7) 44 (0)1793 41 3146<br />

International Section<br />

Economic and Social Research Council<br />

RITZ Jean-Benoît EDF Energy Jean-Benoit.Ritz@edfenergy.com<br />

UK R&D coordination director<br />

Walter House<br />

418 - 422 Strand<br />

London, WC2R 0PT<br />

SANSOM Nigel NHS <strong>Innovation</strong> Centre nigel.sansom@institute.nhs.uk<br />

6 th Floor 44 (0)207 633 7129<br />

New Kings Beam House<br />

22 Upper Ground<br />

London SE1 9BW<br />

SAUER Peter Counsellor wiss-1@lond.auswaertiges-amt.de<br />

Head of Division 44 (0) 20 78 24 13 46 (47)<br />

Science, Technology & Environmental Policy<br />

German Embassy<br />

23 Belgrave Square<br />

London SW1X 8PZ<br />

SIMAKOVA Elena University of Exeter Business School e.simakova@exeter.ac.uk<br />

Streatham Court 44 (0)1392726271<br />

Streatham Campus<br />

University of Exeter<br />

Exeter<br />

EX4 4ST<br />

SIMON-<br />

DELAVELLE Frédérique Counsellor for Labour, Health and Social affairs frederique.simon-delavelle@diplomatie.gouv.fr<br />

French Embassy<br />

SIMPSON Karl Head of Life Sciences J.K.Simpson@soton.ac.uk<br />

Research & <strong>Innovation</strong> Services 44(0)23 8059 3895<br />

Building 37, University of Southampton 44 (0) 7760 343469<br />

Southampton SO17 1BJ, United Kingdom<br />

SINCLAIR Mark Science and <strong>Innovation</strong> Network Mark.Sinclair@fco.gov.uk<br />

British Embassy<br />

21


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

35 rue faubourg saint honoré<br />

75008 Paris<br />

SMITH Neil Manager neil.j.smith@lloyds.com<br />

Lloyd's Exposure Management, Perf. Management 44 (0)207 327 5605<br />

1 Lime Street<br />

London<br />

EC3M 7HA<br />

STUBBS Rebecca Commissioning Editor rebecca.stubbs@wiley.com<br />

WILEY-BLACKWELL 44 (0)1865476547<br />

John Wiley & Sons<br />

9600 Garsington Road<br />

Oxford OX4 2DQ<br />

TSANG Lincoln Arnold & Porter (UK) LLP Lincoln.Tsang@APORTER.COM<br />

Tower 42 44 (0) 207 786 6104<br />

25 Old Broad Street<br />

London, EC2N 1HQ<br />

TRAN Lang Institute of Occupational Medicine lang.tran@iom-world.org<br />

Research Avenue North 44 (0) 1314498050<br />

Riccarton<br />

Edinburgh<br />

EH14 4AP<br />

VEIE Ellen Special Adviser elv@rcn.no<br />

Department for Technology and Transport 4 799 649 098<br />

Division for <strong>Innovation</strong><br />

The Research Council of Norway<br />

VINCENTI Alexandra Research Executive, Emerging Risks and Research Alexandra.Vincenti@lloyds.com<br />

Lloyd's Exposure Management, Perf. Management 44 (0)20 7327 6926<br />

Lloyd's<br />

VOETEN Jaap Research Fellow j.voeten@tilburguniversity.nl<br />

<strong>Responsible</strong> <strong>Innovation</strong> and Development J.Voeten@uvt.nl<br />

Economics Development Research Institute 31 13 466 3251<br />

Tilburg University 31 6 2530 6451<br />

The Netherlands<br />

von Schomberg Rene European Commission DG Research, Rene.vonschomberg@ec.europa.eu<br />

Governance and Ethics Unit 32.2.2990160<br />

SDME 7/70<br />

B-1049 Brussel/Bruxelles<br />

WIENROTH Matthias Honorary Research Fellow matthias.wienroth@gmx.de<br />

Department of Geography<br />

Durham University<br />

WILKINS Terry Chief Executive Officer t.a.wilkins@leeds.ac.uk<br />

Yorkshire <strong>For</strong>ward Professor of 44 (0)113 343 2570<br />

Nanomanufacturing <strong>Innovation</strong><br />

Nanomanufacturing Institute<br />

University of Leeds<br />

School of Process, Environ. & Mat. Engineering<br />

Houldsworth Building - Clarendon Road<br />

Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom<br />

WILKINSON Michael NHS <strong>Innovation</strong> Centre michael.wilkinson@institute.nhs.uk<br />

6 th Floor 44 (0) 7595 736150<br />

New Kings Beam House<br />

22 Upper Ground<br />

London SE1 9BW<br />

22


Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 <strong>May</strong> <strong>2011</strong><br />

23

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