Friese, Carrie
Dr Carrie Friese
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Experience keywords:
health, illness and biomedicine; assisted reproductive technologies and cloning; animals in science and society
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My principal research interests are in reproduction, genetics, medical technologies and animal in bioscience, biomedicine, and society. I explore these topics at the intersections of medical sociology and science and technology studies. My previous research focused on the use of assisted reproductive technologies for human reproduction in the context of infertility. My recent research has shifted the analytic gaze to explore the development of somatic cell nuclear transfer for species preservation in the context of biomedical research and the changing terrain of zoological parks. I am currently initiating two new research projects. One explores genetic disease and corresponding technologies from a sociological perspective, focusing on severe combined immune deficiency or what is more commonly known as "the bubble boy disease". The other explores the role of animal husbandry in the life sciences and biomedicine.
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Countries and regions to which research relates:
US; UK
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The following references are sourced from LSE Research Online|. References that are linked lead to the full text.
Friese, Carrie and Clarke, Adele (2012) Transposing bodies of knowledge and technique: animal models at work in reproductive sciences. Social studies of science, 42 (1). pp. 31-52. ISSN 0306-3127 Friese, Carrie (2010) Classification conundrums: categorizing chimeras and enacting species preservation. Theory and society, 39 (2). pp. 145-172. ISSN 0304-2421 Friese, Carrie (2009) Models of cloning, models for the zoo: rethinking the sociological significance of cloned animals. BioSocieties, 4 (4). pp. 367-390. ISSN 1745-8552 Friese, Carrie and Becker, Gay and Nachtigall, Robert D. (2008) Older motherhood and the changing life course in the era of assisted reproductive technologies. Journal of aging studies, 22 (1). pp. 65-73. ISSN 0890-4065 Friese, Carrie and Becker, Gay and Nachtigall, Robert D. (2006) Rethinking the biological clock: eleventh-hour moms, miracle moms and meanings of age-related infertility. Social science & medicine, 63 (6). pp. 1550-1560. ISSN 0277-9536
LSE Research Online is the primary resource for references to publications. For queries or updates please email the LSE Research Online team at lseresearchonline@lse.ac.uk|.
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AwardsIllinois Distinguished Dissertation Award, International Association of Qualitative Inquiry (2009); Anselm Strauss Special Award for Distinguished Qualitative Dissertation, UCSF (2007)
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