Founding offer · lifetime membership for a single £24, exclusive to our first members · closes 20 June Claim your place →
Global Research Partnerships £24 Lifetime Log inCreate free account

Funded Projects › HORIZON

RELI-GENE · Governing Health, Family and Religion: The Biopolitics of Genetic Counselling and Religious Family Formations

HORIZONStatus: SIGNED1 December 202530 November 2030EU funding €1,999,883Call ERC-2024-COG

RELI-GENE is an interdisciplinary project which examines minorities’ attitudes towards genetic counselling and reproductive options in the case of inherited genetic recessive disorders and analyses how healthcare policies govern communities’ family formations. It focuses on close-knit religious minorities that emphasise consanguineous and endogamous marriages to strengthen communal bonds to provide a sense of solidarity and of safeguarding lineage and purity. Current scholarship focuses predominantly on single national contexts, specific healthcare policies and individual religious communities, neglecting comparable perspectives. RELI-GENE specifically analyses how transnational spaces serve as strategies to navigate and bypass national healthcare policies and legal restrictions related to marriage and reproductive practices. The project adds a new conceptual framework to understanding (a) the broader implications of directive, nondirective and mandatory genetic counselling within diverse national healthcare systems; (b) communities’ own use of biopolitics to construct discourses around lineage and purity; (c) how individuals respond to both state policies and to the religio-cultural norms and expectations within their communities.RELI-GENE offers a perspectival shift on the governmentality and biopolitics of family formation by1. examining the different forms of power in state-led biopolitics in Israel and the United Arab Emirates, Sweden and Germany and their respective healthcare systems, 2. exploring communities and their transnational links which for religious, cultural and political reasons manifest a biopolitics of purity and examining how these communities construct lineage-oriented narratives to counter their minority status or sense of persecution and marginalisation,3. analysing how individuals respond to state policies but also to the religio-cultural traditions of their communities, and how they engage in various forms of self-governing.

Consortium · 1 organisation

coordinator

SCHOOL OF ORIENTAL AND AFRICAN STUDIES ROYAL CHARTER

UK · €1,999,883

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

← Find collaborators and more funded projects

Source: CORDIS, Publications Office of the European Union. Global Research Partnerships surfaces open EU research data to help you find collaborators; we are not affiliated with the European Union.