Public Opinion

Public opinion surveys seek to capture views on biotechnology at specific historical moments and track shifts over time. They can also provide clues about how public views are shaped by high-profile events, political climates, and cultural shifts. The Center for Genetics and Society has collected poll data from 1986 to the present. There are two main pages covering opinion polls on Heritable Human Genetic Modification and Cloning and on Animal and Pet Cloning. Sources are provided, though some external links may no longer be operative.

Biopolitical Times
Here’s a provocative headline and subhead from OneZero, a publication by Medium, above an article by Emily Mullin published on August 17: Men Are Twice as Likely to Support Genetically Engineered Babies Than Women The public may be ready for gene-edited babies. This is clearly an attention-grabber...
Biopolitical Times

If you ask the wrong question, you will certainly get the wrong answer. Likewise, if your questions are confusing or misleading, you may get answers that don’t make sense. In the worst of all worlds, the answers, right or wrong, can be misinterpreted to say something they clearly don’t.

The Pew survey of global attitudes to biotechnology research published on December 10 asks the wrong questions in a confusing way. This is significant, in itself and even more because all...

Internal Content

This page displays the results of more than 60 major public opinion surveys about four...

Aggregated News

On 7 November 2020, moments before Kamala Harris and Joe Biden began their victory speeches, giant screens flanking the stage...

Close up photo of a yellow winged moth against a white background.

Aggregated News

Bird's eye view of a cutting board, displaying vegetables and an uncooked salmon. A bowl of peppercorns are plated to its side.

Aggregated News

Black and white photo of an hour glass, with sand falling.

CGS-authored

A woman of color holds a demonstration sign reading, "George Orwell, Octavia Butler, Margaret Atwood--They warned us!"

Aggregated News

Illustration of a child looking directly forward to a double helix oriented vertically. A  glimmer of light appears between the child and the DNA.

Aggregated News

A baby stiffly lays in a cardboard box, surrounded by package bubble wrap.

CGS-authored

Human hands hold up a crystal ball to the sky, reflecting the blue sky with clouds and city buildings.

Aggregated News