Title :
An Anticipatory Social Assessment of Factory-Grown Meat
Author :
Mattick, Carolyn S. ; Wetmore, Jameson M. ; Allenby, Braden R.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Public Health, Univ. of Texas at Houston, Houston, TX, USA
Abstract :
On August 5, 2013, a prototype sample of cultured, or in vitro, meat was tasted at a well-publicized event in London [1]. This hamburger was not grown in an animal, but rather from bovine stem cells in Dr. Mark Post?s laboratory at Maastricht University in the Netherlands. The event may foreshadow a day when traditional livestock production has given way to large-scale growth of meat in factories, or carneries. Dr. Post has suggested that commercialization of cultured meat could be ten to twenty years away [1]. The implications are profound. By some accounts the technology could reduce the environmental impacts of meat production [2], promote human health by eliminating harmful contents such as saturated fats and pathogens [2], address global hunger issues [3], and alleviate the ethical concerns associated with industrial livestock operations [4]. However, technologies powerful enough to address such significant challenges often come with unforseen consequences and a host of costs and benefits that seldom accrue to the same actors. In extreme cases, they can even be destabilizing to social, institutional, economic, and cultural systems [5].
Keywords :
environmental factors; food processing industry; health and safety; production engineering computing; social sciences computing; London; Maastricht University; Netherlands; anticipatory social assessment; bovine stem cells; environmental impacts; factory-grown meat; hamburger; human health; livestock production; meat production; Agriculture; Cultural differences; Food manufacturing; Food products; In vitro; Production facilities; Social factors;
Journal_Title :
Technology and Society Magazine, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MTS.2015.2395967