"Nano Risk Governance: Current Developments and Future Perspectives"

Nanotechnology Law & Business just published its new edition.  For those who might be interested, Volume 6.2 contains an article I co-authored with several nano-friends entitled: "Nano Risk Governance: Current Developments and Future Perspectives."  You can find the article here.  An abstract follows.

As with many new technologies, developing a framework for making risk management decisions for nanotechnology is a challenge. Risk assessment has been proposed as the foundation for many regulatory frameworks for nanomaterials. Although the traditional risk assessment paradigm successfully used by the scientific community since the early 1980s may be generally applicable, its application to nanotechnology requires a significant information base. The authors’ experience supporting federal agencies in the United States, Canada, and the European Union—as well as state agencies in Massachusetts and New York and cities such as Berkeley and Cambridge—suggests that nanomaterial regulatory frameworks could be built upon existing regulatory approaches with the addition of a more rigorous and transparent method for integrating technical information and expert judgment. The authors argue that the current focus on studying the amount of risk acceptable for a specific technology or material should be shifted toward comparative assessment of available alternatives, and the use of science and policy to identify alternative nanotechnologies and opportunities for risk reduction and innovation. This approach involves the use of both quantitative and qualitative decision analysis tools, offering roadmaps for assessing different information sources and making policy decisions. Two representative methods presented are the Alternatives Assessment method and the Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis method.

Igor Linkov, U.S. Army
F. Kyle Satterstrom, Harvard University
John C. Monica Jr., Porter Wright Morris & Arthur LLP
Steffen Foss Hansen, Technical University of Denmark
Thomas A. Davis, University of Montreal

 

Green Building Expo and Get Green Business Conference

On May 19, 2009 -- Porter Wright is a sponsor of the Green Building Expo and Get Green Business Conference at the Nationwide and Ohio Farm Bureau 4-H Center on The Ohio State University Campus in Columbus, Ohio.   The event is presented by Columbus Mayor Michael Coleman’s Green Team and is expected to draw over 1,000 attendees.  The conference will bring together local business leaders to position the region for growth and new opportunities.  In addition to nearly 70 exhibitors, various educational programs will be offered such as “Liability of Building Green – Legal issues facing Building Owners & Design Professionals,” “Green Renovation Strategies – The Audit Process & Implementing your Energy Goals,” and “Economic Stimulus Plan – Update for Green Building Industry & Businesses in Ohio.”  Other programs will include “How to Become a Greenspot,” “Senate Bill 221,” “Energy Efficiency & Conservation,” “Cap & Trade,” and “By-Product Synergy.”  For additional information, please contact Tracy Treon at ttreon@porterwright.com

PDF of "A Nano-Mesothelioma False Alarm"

Nanotechnology Law and Business was kind enough to let us post a PDF of "A Nano-Mesothelioma False Alarm" here after several readers requested a copy. 

Please be sure to visit the journal to see the rest of this issue's articles:

  • Grading of Fullerene Nanotubes for Composite Applications
  • Next Generation Carbon Fiber
  • Patenting Graphene: Opportunities and Challenges
  • Oxonica v. Neuftec: Nanoparticle Fuel Additive Litigation in the United Kingdom
  • Mediating the Uncertainty and Abstraction of Nanotechnology Promotion and Control: “Late” Lessons from Other “Early Warnings” in History
  • The Implications of Recent Nanomaterials Toxicity Studies for the Nanotech Community
  • A Nano-Mesothelioma False Alarm
  • Convergence of Cleantech and Nanotech and the Benefits to the Nanotech Sector
  • French and European Community Law on the Nanometric Forms of Chemical Substances: Questions About How the Law Handles Uncertain Risks
  • The Validity of European Nanotechnology Patents in Germany
  • Book Review of Nanotechnology & Society: Current and Emerging Ethical Issues
  • Top Ten Ways Nanotech Will Impact Cleantech
  • Updates