The Social Life of DNA: Race, Genetics and Genealogy

Tuesday, September 11, 2018 - 4:15pm

Location: 

Williams Hall, Roemmele Global Commons
Africana Studies (NEH) | American Studies | Center for Ethics | Health, Medicine & Society | Humanities Center | Presidential Endowed Chair in Health | Religion Studies | Sociology & Anthropology | Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies
The Social Life of DNA: Race, Genetics, and Genealogy
 
Professor Alondra Nelson, Columbia University
 
Nelson unravels the double helix of genetics and racial justice. Ancestry tracing by black Americans is very popular, using sites like africanancestry.com and 23andme. Has it helped civil rights? Social justice? Legal claims? Yes and no.
 
The Center for Ethics is funded in part by the ENDOWMENT FUND for the TEACHING of ETHICAL DECISION-MAKING
 
Any views, findings, conclusions or recommendations expressed in this program do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
 
 

Department: 

Health, Medicine and Society