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1.
Epidemiol Prev ; 39(3): 160-5, 2015.
Article in Italian | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26407469

ABSTRACT

In the last two decades, the debate on the meaning of science in relation to societies that create it, nourish it, and benefit from it, focused on civil society's ability to produce knowledge. This yielded first the concept of participatory science and later the wider concept of participatory research. Throughout Europe, numerous collective experimentations have generated countless interactions, and new interfaces between the world of research and civil society are constantly being created. But in spite of the proliferation of these experiences, a paradox slows down their acknowledgment and legitimation. On the one hand, these interactions often go unseen and unrecognized by the institutions, public policies, and even at times their very creators. On the other hand, scientists, are still overwhelmingly wary of civil society and, perceiving only its intellectual deficit and lack of comprehension, they fail to consider the study and development of these interactions as being of primary importance. The Sciences and Society Alliance, which was recently founded in France, provides a platform where these collaborative experiences can be collected, studied, supported, communicated, and institutionally acknowledged. The launch of this process,which is soon to be European in scope, answers the need to bring science into the democratic path tread by the societies that create it. In its ability to compose diversity, this process is an example of deep democracy.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research , Democracy , Foundations , Knowledge , Professional Competence , Public Policy , Science , Comprehension , Cooperative Behavior , European Union , France , Humans
2.
Dev Growth Differ ; 38(5): 557-564, 1996 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37281251

ABSTRACT

Suppressor genes of the vestigial phenotype have been isolated in a wild-type population. These suppressors have an effect on different wing mutants and are allele-specific in the case of vestigial. In a vgBG background they produced overgrowth of the imaginal wing disc. They also induce cell death in the wild-type strain and alter the distribution of cell death in the mutant strain. Expression of vestigial is increased in the wing disc only. Hypotheses formed to determine the nature of these suppressors are in favor of a direct interaction between these genes and vestigial.

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