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 Richard OWEN Chair in Responsible Innovation, Environment and Health - University of Exeter Business School Professor Owen holds a Chair in Responsible Innovation, Environment and Health at the University of Exeter Business School, where he sits in the School of Management. He holds a joint appointment with the European Centre for Environment and Human Health. His primary research involves understanding the responsible emergence of disruptive innovation and new technologies in democratic society. He has worked closely with the UK Research Councils in this regard, including current funding from ESRC and EPSRC to develop a Responsible Innovation Framework for operational use by them. In previous roles he led on emerging risks in his capacity as Head of Environment and Human Health at the Environment Agency (UK) and as Chair of the OECD Steering Group on Risk Assessment of Nanomaterials. He has a background in risk assessment, governance and regulation, working at the interface between disciplines to support national and international policy development. Xavier PAVIE Researcher and Lecturer in innovation management and strategy at ESSEC Business School Xavier Pavie is the Executive Director of the Institute for Service Innovation & Strategy (ESSEC). Graduate in business science as well as in philosophy, Mr. Pavie has held executive position in leading companies such as Unilever and Nestlé for fifteen years. After several years as a Marketing Director at Club Med especially focusing on innovation, he has decided to join academia to strengthen the team of ESSEC in innovation management. Mr. Pavie's publications and public appearances emphasise philosophical approaches on responsibleinnovation as a source of innovation and performance. He published several articles and books in philosophy (about spirituals exercises) and also in innovation. Dominique PECCOUD Former Special Adviser to the Director-General of the International Labour Organization for Socio-Religious affairs (1996-2008) Dominique Peccoud, a French Jesuit born in 1946, has been Special Adviser to the Director-General of the International Labour Organization for Socio-Religious affairs from 1996 to 2008. In addition to this position, he was in charge of managing relations between the ILO and Non Governmental Organizations (NGOs). A member of the French Academy of Agriculture and of the French National Academy of Engineering, D. Peccoud advises public and private organizations on the ethical dimensions of social and economic issues regarding the application of new technologies. Prior to joining the ILO, he was President of a technological graduate school in Toulouse (France). Earlier times he was lecturing at the PARIS VII University and was headmaster of the "Ecole Sainte Geneviève", a famous college in Versailles. Dr. Peccoud holds a doctorate in theoretical computer science from the Sorbonne in Paris and master's degrees in philosophy and theology. Judith PETTS Dean of Social and Human Sciences - University of Southampton Professor Judith Petts is Dean of Social and Human Sciences at the University of Southampton a post she has held since October 2010. The Faculty is a £55m activity crossing subjects as diverse as Maths and Social Policy with over 5000 students and 450 staff. Prior to this she was Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Research and Knowledge Transfer, at the University of Birmingham (2007-10) and Head of the School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, from 2001-2007. She was also Director of the Centre for Environmental Research and Training, and as at Southampton, held the Chair of Environmental Risk Management. Prior to joining Birmingham (1999) she was Director of the Centre for Hazard and Risk Management, Loughborough University. Judith has over 30 years applied strategic interdisciplinary research experience in the broad area of environmental risk management Her research spans three primary areas: environmental governance and policy-making, science-society relationships, and public perceptions, responses and behavior. She has acted as 12

Franco-British workshop on responsible innovation London, 23-24 May 2011 a government advisor across multiple Departments and Agencies and also as a special advisor to the House of Commons and House of Lords. She was a member of Council of the Natural Environment Research Council (2000-6). Judith is currently a Member of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution, a Member of EPSRC’s Societal Issues Panel, and of the Steering Group of the Sciencewise Expert Resource Centre. Jean-Luc PUJOL INRA, National Institute of Agronomy Jean-Luc Pujol is a former student of Ecole Normale Superieure and graduated from ENGREF, school of management in agronomy, forestry, water and environmental science and technology. He was science and technology adviser at the Center for Strategic Analysis for 4 years. He now works at the National Institute of Agronomy where he is in charge of a mission of anticipation in the relation between science and society. He was a moderator of a panel of experts mobilised as support for the special commission of public debate on nanotechnology. Steve RAYNER James Martin Professor of Science and Civilization Director of the Institute for Science, Innovation and Society - Oxford University’s Saïd Business School Steve Rayner is James Martin Professor of Science and Civilization and Director of the Institute for Science, Innovation and Society at Oxford University’s Saïd Business School, from where he also directs the Oxford Programme for the Future of Cities and Co-directs the Oxford Geoengineering Programme. He is also Honorary Professor of Climate Change and Society at the University of Copenhagen. He previously held senior research positions in two US National Laboratories and has taught at leading US universities. He has served on various US, UK, and international bodies addressing science, technology and the environment, including Britain’s Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the Royal Society’s Working Group on Climate Geoengineering. Until 2008 he also directed the national Science in Society Research Programme of the Economic and Social Research Council. He was included in the 2008 Smart List by Wired Magazine as “one of the 15 people the next US President should listen to”. Arie RIP Technology Assessment of Nanotechnology - University of Twente Arie Rip was educated as a chemist and philosopher at the University of Leiden. In the 1970s, he set up and led a program of teaching and research in Chemistry and Society in that University. He was Professor of Science Dynamics at the University of Amsterdam (1984-1987) and Professor of Philosophy of Science and Technology at the University of Twente (1987-2006) where he continues after his retirement. He holds a Visiting Professorship at the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa. Currently, he leads a research program on Technology Assessment of Nanotechnology (as part of the Dutch R&D Consortium NanoNed). His other main research interests are the changes in knowledge production and the future of science institutions. Nikolas ROSE Professor of Sociology - London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) Director of the BIOS Centre for the Study of Bioscience, Biomedicine, Biotechnology and Society Nikolas Rose is Martin White Professor of Sociology, and Director of the BIOS Centre for the Study of Bioscience, Biomedicine, Biotechnology and Society at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He is also co-PI for the LSE-Imperial College Centre for Synthetic Biology and Innovation (CSynBI). His most recent books are The Politics of Life Itself : Biomedicine, Power, and Subjectivity in the Twenty-First Century (Princeton, 2006) and (with Peter Miller) Governing The Present (Polity, 2008). The outcome of his recent research with Joelle Abi-Rached on the political, social, legal and economic implications of recent developments in the brain sciences will be published as Neuro: the New Brain Sciences and the Remaking of the Human (Princeton, 2012). He is co-editor of BioSocieties: an interdisciplinary journal for social studies of the life sciences, Chair of the European Neuroscience and Society Network, and a member of numerous advisory groups including the Nuffield Council on Bioethics. 13

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

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