Article ID: CBB252611287

Race, Ethnicity, Ancestry, and Genomics in Hawai‘i: Discourses and Practices (2020)

unapi

This paper examines how populations in a multiethnic cohort project used to study environmental causes of cancer in Hawai‘i have been reorganized in ways that have contributed to the racialization of the human genome. We examine the development of two central genomic data infrastructures, the multiethnic cohort (MEC) and a collection of reference DNA called the HapMap. The MEC study populations were initially designed to examine differences in nutrition as risk factors for disease, and then were repurposed to search for potential genomic risk factors for disease. The biomaterials collected from these populations became institutionalized in a data repository that later became a major source of “diverse” DNA for other studies of genomic risk factors for disease. We examine what happened when the MEC biorepository and dataset, organized by ethnic labels, came to be used, in conjunction with the data from the HapMap reference populations, to construct human population genetic categories.Developing theory on genomic racialization, we examine (1) how and why Hawai‘i became sited as a “virtual natural laboratory” for collecting and examining biomaterials from different ethnic groups, and the consequences of the transformation of those local Hawaiian ethnic groups into five racial and ethnic OMB categories meant to represent global continental groups for genomic studies. We then discuss (2) how this transformation, via the geneticists’ effort to standardize the study of genomic risk for disease around the globe, led to the construction of humans as statistical genetic resources and entities for genomic biomedicine and the human population genetics discipline. Through this transformation of populations and biorepositories, we argue (3) that the twenty-first century has seen the intertwining of “race,” “population,” and “genome” via large-scale genomic association studies. We show how “race” has become imbricated in human population genetics and genomic biomedicine.This essay is part of a special issue entitled Pacific Biologies: How Humans Become Genetic, edited by Warwick Anderson and M. Susan Lindee.

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Authors & Contributors
Bliss, Catherine Anne
Capocci, Mauro
Fullwiley, Duana
Hogan, Andrew J.
Lampland, Martha
Lee, Catherine Y.
Journals
Science as Culture
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
American Quarterly
Current Anthropology
East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
Publishers
University of Pennsylvania
Harvard University Press
Rutgers University Press
University of California Press
New School University
University of California, San Diego
Concepts
Human genetics
Science and race
Genomics
Population genetics
Genetics
DNA; RNA
People
Cavalli-Sforza, L. Luca
Foucault, Michel
Penrose, Lionel
Ceppellini, Ruggero
He, Jiankui
Time Periods
21st century
20th century, late
20th century
20th century, early
Places
United States
Great Britain
Asia
Canada
China
Europe
Institutions
Human Genome Project
European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL)
GenBank
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