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géniques

Géniques is a term used in some discussions of biotechnology and speculative biology to denote the study and practice of techniques that influence genetic information in living organisms. The concept foregrounds not only the technical methods but also the theoretical and ethical frameworks that guide their use.

In this usage, géniques encompasses gene editing, regulation of gene expression, genome design, and related delivery

The term is not uniformly standardized and appears mainly in debates about the future of biotechnology. Some

Given the potential risks, proponents emphasize responsible innovation, risk assessment, transparency, public engagement, and robust regulatory

Critics warn that the label can blur boundaries with established disciplines such as genetics and synthetic

See also: genetics, genetic engineering, synthetic biology, bioethics.

approaches,
as
well
as
the
computational
and
systems-biology
work
needed
to
model
outcomes.
The
field
is
described
as
cross-disciplinary,
spanning
genetics,
bioinformatics,
ethics,
law,
and
policy,
with
applications
imagined
in
medicine,
agriculture,
and
environmental
management.
writers
use
géniques
to
distinguish
practical
manipulation
of
genetic
material
from
broader
genetics
research,
while
others
employ
it
as
an
umbrella
for
emerging
capabilities
that
may
require
new
governance
norms.
frameworks
to
address
safety,
equity,
and
dual-use
concerns.
biology,
and
may
hinder
clear
policy
discussion
if
used
inconsistently.