Family History and the Global Politics of DNA
Date
2019Author
Abel, Sarah <University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK>
Tsosie, Krystal S. <Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA>
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The global DNA ancestry industry appeals to various “markets”: diasporic groups seeking to reconstruct lost
kinship links; adoptees looking for biological relatives; genealogists tracing their family trees; and those who
are merely curious about what DNA can reveal about their identity. However, the language of empowerment
and openness employed by DNA ancestry-testing companies in their publicity materials masks the important
commercial and private interests at stake. Drawing particularly on the experiences of Native and Indigenous
American communities, this article highlights some of the contradictions and dilemmas engendered by the
industry, and questions to what extent its practices can empower users without infringing upon the rights of
other groups.