biocolonialist
English
Etymology
bio- + colonialism
Adjective
biocolonialist (comparative more biocolonialist, superlative most biocolonialist)
- (social sciences) Engaging in, characteristic of, or related to biocolonialism.
- 2000, M. A. Jaimes Guerrero, “Native Womanism: Exemplars of indigenism in sacred traditions of kinship”, in Graham Harvey, editor, Indigenous Religion: A Companion, page 50:
- Hence, Indigenism is concerned both with challenging this biocolonialist agenda that has dire portents for a ‘new age eugenics’, and also with ecological alternatives that seek to live in reciprocity with the land.
- 2005, Eugene Thacker, The Global Genome: Biotechnology, Politics, and Culture, page 139:
- But perhaps the most noteworthy distinction is not between population genomics projects, but between recent projects that emphasize finding specific-population genomes and the earlier “biocolonialist” projects such as the HGDP.
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