Translating Population Difference: The Use and Re-Use of Genetic Ancestry in Brazilian Cancer Genetics

Med Anthropol. 2016;35(1):58-72. doi: 10.1080/01459740.2015.1091818. Epub 2015 Oct 9.

Abstract

In the past ten years, there has been an expansion of scientific interest in population genetics linked to both understanding histories of human migration and the way that population difference and diversity may account for and/or be implicated in health and disease. In this article, I examine how particular aspects of a globalizing research agenda related to population differences and genetic ancestry are taken up in locally variant ways in the nascent field of Brazilian cancer genetics. Drawing on a broad range of ethnographic data from clinical and nonclinical contexts in the south of Brazil, I examine the ambiguities that attention to genetic ancestry generates, so revealing the disjunctured and diverse ways a global research agenda increasingly orientated to questions of population difference and genetic ancestry is being used and reused.

Keywords: Brazil; South America; genetic ancestry; race; risk.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Anthropology, Medical
  • Brazil / ethnology
  • Ethnicity / genetics
  • Female
  • Genetic Predisposition to Disease / genetics*
  • Genetics, Population
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Neoplasms / genetics*
  • Racial Groups / genetics