The analysis of the intersection between race and microbiome science is a growing area in the social sciences, but little scholarly attention has been given to how population categories, that often have a racial subtext when applied to the Global South, are constructed, or how they intersect with or diverge from local conceptions of race. Drawing on research on an EU-funded human microbiome project involving Italian and Tunisian researchers, I argue that population categories in microbiome research are not merely imposed, but are continuously negotiated and co-constructed with local, homegrown racial categories.

Negotiated Categories: The Co-Construction of the Tunisian Population in Human Microbiome Science and Its Historical Entanglements

Scaglioni, Marta
2025-01-01

Abstract

The analysis of the intersection between race and microbiome science is a growing area in the social sciences, but little scholarly attention has been given to how population categories, that often have a racial subtext when applied to the Global South, are constructed, or how they intersect with or diverge from local conceptions of race. Drawing on research on an EU-funded human microbiome project involving Italian and Tunisian researchers, I argue that population categories in microbiome research are not merely imposed, but are continuously negotiated and co-constructed with local, homegrown racial categories.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10278/5105430
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