836 research outputs found
STS in management education: connecting theory and practice
This paper explores the value of science and technology studies (STS) to management education. The work draws on an ethnographic study of second year management undergraduates studying decision making. The nature and delivery of the decision making module is outlined and the value of STS is demonstrated in terms of both teaching method and module content. Three particular STS contributions are identified and described: the social construction of technological systems; actor network theory; and ontological politics. Affordances and sensibilities are identified for each contribution and a discussion is developed that illustrates how these versions of STS are put to use in management education. It is concluded that STS has a pivotal role to play in critical management (education) and in the process offers opportunities for new forms of managin
Synthetic biology: ethical ramifications 2009
During 2007 and 2008 synthetic biology moved from the manifesto stage to research programs. As of 2009, synthetic biology is ramifying; to ramify means to produce differentiated trajectories from previous determinations. From its inception, most of the players in synthetic biology agreed on the need for (a) rationalized design and construction of new biological parts, devices, and systems as well as (b) the re-design of natural biological systems for specified purposes, and that (c) the versatility of designed biological systems makes them suitable to address such challenges as renewable energy, the production of inexpensive drugs, and environmental remediation, as well as providing a catalyst for further growth of biotechnology. What is understood by these goals, however, is diverse. Those assorted understandings are currently contributing to different ramifications of synthetic biology. The Berkeley Human Practices Lab, led by Paul Rabinow, is currently devoting its efforts to documenting and analyzing these ramifications as they emerge
Locative media and data-driven computing experiments
Over the past two decades urban social life has undergone a rapid and pervasive geocoding, becoming mediated, augmented and anticipated by location-sensitive technologies and services that generate and utilise big, personal, locative data. The production of these data has prompted the development of exploratory data-driven computing experiments that seek to find ways to extract value and insight from them. These projects often start from the data, rather than from a question or theory, and try to imagine and identify their potential utility. In this paper, we explore the desires and mechanics of data-driven computing experiments. We demonstrate how both locative media data and computing experiments are ‘staged’ to create new values and computing techniques, which in turn are used to try and derive possible futures that are ridden with unintended consequences. We argue that using computing experiments to imagine potential urban futures produces effects that often have little to do with creating new urban practices. Instead, these experiments promote Big Data science and the prospect that data produced for one purpose can be recast for another and act as alternative mechanisms of envisioning urban futures
The biosocial event : responding to innovation in the life sciences
Innovation in the life sciences calls for reflection on how sociologies separate and relate life processes and social processes. To this end we introduce the concept of the ‘biosocial event’. Some life processes and social processes have more mutual relevance than others. Some of these relationships are more negotiable than others. We show that levels of relevance and negotiability are not static but can change within existing relationships. Such changes, or biosocial events, lie at the heart of much unplanned biosocial novelty and much deliberate innovation. We illustrate and explore the concept through two examples – meningitis infection and epidemic, and the use of sonic ‘teen deterrents’ in urban settings. We then consider its value in developing sociological practice oriented to critically constructive engagement with innovation in the life sciences
Counterparts: Clothing, value and the sites of otherness in Panapompom ethnographic encounters
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in Anthropological Forum, 18(1), 17-35,
2008 [copyright Taylor & Francis], available online at:
http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/00664670701858927.Panapompom people living in the western Louisiade Archipelago of Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea, see their clothes as indices of their perceived poverty. ‘Development’ as a valued form of social life appears as images that attach only loosely to the people employing them. They nevertheless hold Panapompom people to account as subjects to a voice and gaze that is located in the imagery they strive to present: their clothes. This predicament strains anthropological approaches to the study of Melanesia that subsist on strict alterity, because native self‐judgments are located ‘at home’ for the ethnographer. In this article, I develop the notion of the counterpart as a means to explore these forms of postcolonial oppression and their implications for the ethnographic encounter
Critical methods in international relations: the politics of techniques, devices and acts
Methods have increasingly been placed at the heart of theoretical and empirical research in IR and social sciences more generally. This article explores the role of methods in International Relations and argues that methods can be part of a critical project if reconceptualised away from neutral techniques of organising empirical material and research design. It proposes a two-pronged reconceptualisation of critical methods as devices which enact worlds and acts which disrupt particular worlds. Developing this conceptualisation allows us to foreground questions of knowledge and politics as stakes of method and methodology rather than exclusively of ontology, epistemology or theory. It also allows us to move away from the dominance of scientificity (and its weaker versions of systematicity and rigour) to understand methods as less pure, less formal, messier and more experimental, carrying substantive political visions
Trust, Nostalgia and Narrative Accounts of Blood Banking in England in the 21st Century
Historically, cultural accounts and descriptions of blood banking in Britain have
been associated with notions of altruism, national solidarity and imagined
community. While these ideals have continued to be influential, the business of
procuring and supplying blood has become increasingly complex. Drawing on
interview data with donors in one blood centre in England, this article reports
that these donors tend not to acknowledge the complex dynamics of production and
exchange in modern blood systems. This, it is argued, is congruent with
nostalgic narratives in both popular and official accounts of blood services,
which tend to bracket these important changes. A shift to a more open
institutional narrative about modern blood services is advocated, as blood
services face current and future challenges
Have we seen the geneticisation of society? Expectations and evidence
Abby Lippman’s geneticization thesis, of the early 1990s, argued and anticipated that with
the rise of genetics, increasing areas of social and health related activities would come to be
understood and defined in genetic terms leading to major changes in society, medicine and
health care. We review the considerable literature on geneticization and consider how the
concept stands both theoretically and empirically across scientific, clinical, popular and lay
discourse and practice. Social science scholarship indicates that relatively little of the original
claim of the geneticization thesis has been realised, highlighting the development of more
complex and dynamic accounts of disease in scientific discourse and the complexity of
relationships between bioscientific, clinical and lay understandings. This scholarship
represents a shift in social science understandings of the processes of sociotechnical change,
which have moved from rather simplistic linear models to an appreciation of disease
categories as multiply understood. Despite these shifts, we argue that a genetic imaginary
persists, which plays a performative role in driving investments in new gene-based
developments. Understanding the enduring power of this genetic imaginary and its
consequences remains a key task for the social sciences, one which treats ongoing genetic
expectations and predictions in a sceptical yet open way
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