Part I. Nano, the Next Dimension of Sustainable Development 1. Background and Roadmap 2. General Philosophy of the Book Part II. Indicators of Nanotechnology Entrepreneurship 3. Introduction 4. R&D Architecture 5. Research Centers and Infrastructure 6. Nano-Related Patent Activities 7. Nano-Products Reaching the Market 8.Conclusion Part III: Nano-Development and Regulatory Practices 9. Areas of Development 10. Initial Positive Regulation 11. Initial Restrictive Regulation 12. Regulatory Frameworks and Exogenous Factors 13. Sustainable Development and Nano-Based Business Activities Part IV: Innovative Practices and Nanotechnology Institutional Emergence 14. Introducing the Case of the ETC Group 15. Theoretical Background 16. Methodology 17. Circumstances and Practices 18. Findings Part V: New Institutionalization Processes: Risk Management and Public Engagement 19. A Chronology of Nanotechnology Institutional Emergence 20. Risk Management and Institutional Emergence 21. A Case Study of Public Engagement 22. Interpretation and Findings Part VI: Towards A New Form of Technological Democracy 23. Sustainable Development and New Governance Options for New Technologies 24. Governance and Norm 25. Interpreting Change 26. Conclusion
Biography
Claire Auplat (PhD) has worked on the co-industrial and institutional emergence of nanotechnologies for the last decade, firstly at Rice University (USA), then at Sciences Po’s chair of sustainable development (France) and at Imperial College business school (UK), and now at Advancia School of entrepreneurship (France). She is a member of the French National Research Council (ANR) specialist committee on eco-innovation (ECOTECH). Her work on nanotechnologies focuses on public policy, risk perception and management, sustainable development and entrepreneurial dynamics.






