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Science & Tech Quote by Richard Curtis

"Laboratories can reduce risk by implementing a proven and internationally accepted quality assurance technology that is applicable across the globe"

About this Quote

There is a quietly political move in Curtis's antiseptic sentence: it sells safety as a matter of adopting the right product of modern governance, not arguing about values. "Reduce risk" is managerial language, the kind that sounds humane while sidestepping the uncomfortable truth that laboratory work will always carry irreducible uncertainty. The promise isn't perfection; it's liability control.

The power phrase is "proven and internationally accepted". That coupling does two things at once. "Proven" invokes evidence and engineering competence, a nod to the technocratic ideal that problems can be solved with the right system. "Internationally accepted" adds social proof and soft coercion: if the world has already agreed, a holdout looks irresponsible. Consent becomes a benchmark; dissent becomes negligence.

Curtis also uses "technology" in an expansive, bureaucratic sense. Quality assurance here isn't just machines and protocols; it's an infrastructure of checklists, audits, accreditation bodies, documentation, and standard operating procedures. Calling that bundle "technology" flatters it with inevitability and progress. You don't debate technology; you implement it.

"Applicable across the globe" is the global health and regulatory imagination in miniature: one harmonized standard traveling frictionlessly from high-resource labs to low-resource settings. The subtext is both idealistic and slippery. Universal applicability sounds egalitarian, but it can also erase local constraints, costs, and the power dynamics of whose standards get to be "international."

Contextually, the quote reads like the voice of modern compliance culture: a pitch to decision-makers who want reputational safety, regulatory alignment, and a defensible paper trail. It's less a vision of science than an argument for trustworthiness at scale.

Quote Details

TopicScience
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Curtis, Richard. (2026, January 15). Laboratories can reduce risk by implementing a proven and internationally accepted quality assurance technology that is applicable across the globe. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/laboratories-can-reduce-risk-by-implementing-a-153179/

Chicago Style
Curtis, Richard. "Laboratories can reduce risk by implementing a proven and internationally accepted quality assurance technology that is applicable across the globe." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/laboratories-can-reduce-risk-by-implementing-a-153179/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Laboratories can reduce risk by implementing a proven and internationally accepted quality assurance technology that is applicable across the globe." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/laboratories-can-reduce-risk-by-implementing-a-153179/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

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Richard Curtis (born November 8, 1956) is a Writer from New Zealand.

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