Identity, DNA Typing and Citizenship: Philosophical Reflections
- Author
- Marie-Hélène Parizeau
- Corporate Author
- Sociologie et sociétés
- ISBN
- ISSN 1492-1375 (numérique)
- Collation
- p. 207–229
- Resource Language
- French
- Year of publication
- 2010
- Topic
- Civic / Citizenship / DemocracyDiversity / Cultural literacy / InclusivenessGlobalisation and social justice / International understanding
- Resource Type
- International normative instruments / policy and advocacy documentsResearch papers / journal articles
- Level of education
- Higher education
- Region
- Europe and North America
- Place of publication
- Québec
In a context of globalization, migratory flows and the hunt for terrorists, how are biometrics, and, more specifically, the notion of the human DNA Typing, changing the individual’s relationship to his or her citizenship ?
To try to answer this question, we review some of the theoretical aspects of citizenship and briefly outline the history of identification measures linked to the advent of citizenship. We then examine the current context of the use of biometrics for identification purposes and the reasons for its use as cited by the European Community and the United States. We more particularly look at the case of the human DNA Typing, using examples from Canada and the United States. The genetic footprint is related to personal identity based on Paul Ricoeur’s concept of narrative identity. We show how the ethno-racial criteria used by biometrics, together with the ideology of multiculturalism, are constructing, in the West, a new narration of the Other, of foreigners, which excludes them from the sphere of citizenship.

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