We live in a time when the possibilities of biotechnology are changing people's lives and giving them new expectations. At the same time, it is clear that the opportunities offered by the natural sciences are limited by society's perceptions of the world, and the use of technology is fundamentally changing people's lives, to which people are not always ready. Technology poses new risks and requires new user knowledge, relationship management and laboratory procedures – all of which we call biosafety.
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Alone but connected? Digital (in)equalities in care work and generational relationships among older people living alone
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The Housing-Integration-Nexus: shaping exchange and innovation for migrants’ access to housing and social inclusion
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Strengthening families, communities and relationships: an anthropological approach to violence prevention
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Capacity building in cross-sectoral research in biosafety
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Latvian rural population development strategies and cultural environment changes
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Reproductive and sexual health study
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Publications
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Projects
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Student research projects