Technology Studies (technology + studies)

Distribution by Scientific Domains

Kinds of Technology Studies

  • and technology studies
  • science and technology studies


  • Selected Abstracts


    Time, space and technology in the working-home: an unsettled nexus

    NEW TECHNOLOGY, WORK AND EMPLOYMENT, Issue 2 2010
    Bjorn Nansen
    The research reported here draws upon four homes in Melbourne, Australia, where variable practices and strategies in the use of information and communication technologies are adopted in negotiating the temporal and spatial dynamics of the working-home. Informed by theories from Science and Technology Studies, we argue that these strategies arise in concernful relation with others,both human and non-human,that enable and constrain the possibilities for action. [source]


    Rethinking the interface between ecology and society.

    JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, Issue 1 2008
    The case of the cockle controversy in the Dutch Wadden Sea
    Summary 1Applied ecology, like conservation research, may deal with societal issues if its scientifically based interventions have societal consequences. Human utilization plays a significant role in many ecosystems, so conservation ecologists often have to act on the interface between science and society, where controversies may arise. 2Using insights from science and technology studies, we have analysed the 15-year controversy on the ecological effects of cockle fishing in the Dutch Wadden Sea, which began around 1990 and involved nature protection and shellfish organizations, as well as several leading Dutch ecologists, in a heated debate. 3During this controversy, evaluative research on the ecological effects of cockle fishing was undertaken by a consortium of institutes in order to contribute to the process of political decision-making by the Dutch government on cockle fishery in this area. In addition to conservational and commercial interests, ecological research itself became part of the controversy. 4The research projects on the effects of cockle fishing during this controversy are examples of societally contextualized science, implying that interests and societal disputes are intertwined with scientific arguments. We have applied a dynamic model of contextualization in which societal stakes and scientific uncertainty are considered as the main factors determining the different contexts in which conservation research functions. 5Synthesis and applications. Conservation research, whether it is fundamental or managerially orientated, is related to greater societal aims and interests and might easily face more or less complex societally contextualized situations. Such situations imply extended responsibilities for scientists. Not only is there a need for sound science, but also for a sound way of interacting and communicating with the societal environment. Some elements of such a notion of extended accountability are presented. [source]


    Doing anthropology in sound

    AMERICAN ETHNOLOGIST, Issue 4 2004
    Steven Feld
    ABSTRACT Sound has come to have a particular resonance in many disciplines over the past decade. Social theorists, historians, literary researchers, folklorists, and scholars in science and technology studies and visual, performative, and cultural studies provide a range of substantively rich accounts and epistemologically provocative models for how researchers can take sound seriously. This conversation explores general outlines of an anthropology of sound. Its main focus, however, is on the issues involved in using sound as a primary medium for ethnographic research. [source]


    Top tip: ways of dealing with analytical constraints in pharmaceutical technology

    PHARMACEUTICAL STATISTICS: THE JOURNAL OF APPLIED STATISTICS IN THE PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY, Issue 1 2002
    Phil Jones TTC Consultants
    In this paper several methods are presented for managing analytical constraints in support of formulation optimization and drug delivery studies. These methods rely on the sequential analytical analysis of pharmaceutical technology studies. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [source]


    Opening up the secret city of Stepnogorsk: biological weapons in the Former Soviet Union

    AREA, Issue 1 2010
    Caitríona McLeish
    For almost 30 years, the Soviet government hid a large part of its biological weapons programme behind the façade of a network of civilian bio-technology facilities, called the All-Union Production Association Biopreparat, which were established to overcome deficiencies in molecular biology and genetics research. This paper, which is developed from a presentation given during an ESRC-sponsored seminar series, ,Locating Technoscience: The Geographies of Science, Technology and Politics', details the secret geography of one of those Biopreparat facilities located in Stepnogorsk, Kazakhstan. In doing this the paper illustrates how secret geographies can operate simultaneously, and at multiple scales. In the case of the Soviet bio-weapons programme, enacting secrecy at these multiple scales was made possible by the purposeful exploitation of ,dual use' technologies. By recounting a trip made to the Kazak facility, and using personal communications with UK and US experts involved with uncovering the Soviet bio-warfare programme, the author addresses some of the methodological challenges involved with researching secret geographies. This case study therefore looks in several directions , to work on the geographies of scale, research on the geographies of knowledge and work on secrecy in science and technology studies. [source]