The project produced a series of key insights to enrich the state of the art, including:
• There is a high degree of terminological confusion regarding the term “synthetic biology,” revealed by the analysis of legal documents and confirmed in interviews with researchers in the field.
• The institutional landscape is polycentric and global governance fragmented; the CBD however is the primary instrument of relevance, due to its broad scope, span of its agenda, history in biotechnology governance, and almost universal application.
• In view of synthetic biology applications in various sectors and of the increasing complexity of the institutional landscape, cooperation and coordination among the various international agreements and bodies is crucial for effective governance.
• A diversity of actors and disciplines are involved in the field of synthetic biology, including academia, industry and private sector, venture capital, and DIY synthetic biologists, from the disciplines of molecular biology, biotechnology, bioinformatics, chemistry, pharmacy, and engineering, among others, with applications ranging from agricultural, pharmaceutical and medical, to several industrial uses.
• The International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) student competition holds a central part in the field’s development, but more traditional actors, such as industry and academia, participate in the CBD expert discussions.
• Research activity remains largely concentrated in the Global North.
• It is vital to bridge the two objectives of fairness and safety in biotechnological innovation towards a broad understanding of risk to include environmental, socio-economic, and cultural dimensions, and reflection of this understanding into societally-appropriate scientific and technological pathways.