
Duana Fullwiley:
· Professor of AnthropologyStanford University · Anthropology
Active 1998–2024
About
Duana Fullwiley is a Professor of Anthropology at Stanford University with research interests spanning anthropology of science, medicine, and well-being. Her work explores how social identities, health outcomes, and scientific narratives intersect, with a focus on genetics, race, ethnicity, migration, and environmental resource scarcity. She has conducted ethnographic fieldwork in the US, France, and Senegal, and her first book, The Enculturated Gene, examines sickle cell health politics and biological difference in West Africa, highlighting how African sickle cell is ordered in ethnic-national terms at the genetic level. This book has received notable awards, including the Amaury Talbot Prize and the Robert B. Textor and Family Prize. Her second book, Tabula Raza, investigates how U.S. political concepts of race influence genetic research and personal genomics, and it has also garnered prestigious awards. Since 2019, she has been studying inequities in human migration, focusing on West African migration to Europe, and how science, technology, and environmental factors shape these trajectories. Her research has been funded by multiple foundations and agencies, and she has held various scholarly positions internationally, including at the Centre de Sociologie de l'Innovation in Paris, the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, and Harvard School of Public Health.
Research topics
- Cognitive psychology
- Political Science
- Psychology
- Psychotherapist
- Neuroscience
Selected publications
University of California Press eBooks · 2024
- Political Science
- Political Science
This vibrant and visionary reimagining of the field of cyberlaw through a feminist lens brings together emerging and established scholars and practitioners to explore how gender, race, sexuality, disability, class, and the intersections of these identities affect cyberspace and the laws that govern it. It promises to build a movement of scholars whose work charts a near future where cyberlaw is informed by feminism.
2024-03-18
book1st authorCorresponding6. A Family Affair: The Barbed Bonds of Relationship
2024-04-23
book-chapter1st authorCorresponding4. For the Love of Blackness: When Science Can Feel Like Home
2024-04-23
book-chapter1st authorCorresponding7. Sci Non-Fi: Cells, Genes, and the Future Tense of “Diversity”
2024-04-23
book-chapter1st authorCorresponding2024-04-02 · 1 citations
book1st authorCorrespondingDuana Fullwiley has penned an intimate chronicle of laboratory life in the genomic age. She presents many of the influential scientists at the forefront of genetics who have redefined how we practice medicine and law and understand ancestry in an era of big data and waning privacy. Exceedingly relatable and human, the scientists in these pages often struggle for visibility, teeter on the tightrope of inclusion, and work tirelessly to imprint the future. As they actively imagine a more equal and just world, they often find themselves ensnared in reproducing timeworn conceits of race and racism that can seed the same health disparities they hope to resolve. Nothing dynamic can live for long as a blank slate, an innocent tabula rasa. But how the blank slate of the once-raceless human genome became one of racial differences, in various forms of what Fullwiley calls the tabula raza , has a very specific and familiar history—one that has cycled through the ages in unexpected ways.
3. Making Race: Pharmacogenetics and Its Necessary People
2024-04-23
book-chapter1st authorCorresponding5. Look, a Black Guy! (With a Genetic Finding)
2024-04-23
book-chapter1st authorCorrespondingGuidelines for genetic ancestry inference created through roundtable discussions
Human Genetics and Genomics Advances · 2023-01-13 · 6 citations
articleOpen accessThe use of genetic and genomic technology to infer ancestry is commonplace in a variety of contexts, particularly in biomedical research and for direct-to-consumer genetic testing. In 2013 and 2015, two roundtables engaged a diverse group of stakeholders toward the development of guidelines for inferring genetic ancestry in academia and industry. This report shares the stakeholder groups' work and provides an analysis of, commentary on, and views from the groundbreaking and sustained dialogue. We describe the engagement processes and the stakeholder groups' resulting statements and proposed guidelines. The guidelines focus on five key areas: application of genetic ancestry inference, assumptions and confidence/laboratory and statistical methods, terminology and population identifiers, impact on individuals and groups, and communication or translation of genetic ancestry inferences. We delineate the terms and limitations of the guidelines and discuss their critical role in advancing the development and implementation of best practices for inferring genetic ancestry and reporting the results. These efforts should inform both governmental regulation and self-regulation.
Hau Journal of Ethnographic Theory · 2021-09-01
article1st authorCorrespondingIn this paper I take the form of the fugue in music to query a contemporary dynamic. It is one where hopefulness entwines with worrisome, oppressive realities that pervade biosocial trends concerning race. Genetic ancestry testing, forensic uses of DNA, and President Obama’s Precision Medicine Initiative are all examined as aspects of this cultural moment where biosociality must be engaged for its potential contradictory outcomes, which I argue are regenerative in form, yet often dystopian.
Frequent coauthors
- 55 shared
Susan M. Reverby
- 55 shared
Alondra Nelson
- 51 shared
Evelynn M. Hammonds
Harvard University
- 51 shared
Lundy Braun
Brown University
- 51 shared
William Quivers
- 51 shared
Alexandra E. Shields
Massachusetts General Hospital
- 50 shared
Anne Fausto‐Sterling
- 10 shared
Helen Y. Weng
Apple (United States)
Education
- 2011
Ph.D., Anthropology
Stanford University
Awards & honors
- Royal Anthropological Institute’s 2011 Amaury Talbot Prize f…
- American Anthropological Association’s 2014 Robert B. Textor…
- Diana Forsythe Prize granted by the Committee for the Anthro…
- C. Wright Mills Award from the Society for the Study of Soci…
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