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Science, Technology and Human Values

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
For more than twenty-seven years Science, Technology & Human Values has provided the forum for cutting-edge research and debate in this dynamic and important field.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

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Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde oct. 1978 / JSTOR
No detectada desde ene. 1999 / hasta dic. 2023 SAGE Journals

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0162-2439

ISSN electrónico

1552-8251

Editor responsable

SAGE Publishing (SAGE)

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Tabla de contenidos

Erratum

<jats:p> In the cover and Contents page of ST&amp;HV special issue (Volume 45, issue 2) on Peopling Europe through Data Practices, there has been a typo in the special issue title. The word “Europea” should have been “Europe.” Here is the correct special issue title: </jats:p><jats:p> Peopling Europe through Data Practices </jats:p><jats:p> The online version of the issue has already been corrected. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Human-Computer Interaction; Economics and Econometrics; Sociology and Political Science; Philosophy; Social Sciences (miscellaneous); Anthropology.

Pp. 561-561

Sensing Race as a Ghost Variable in Science, Technology, and Medicine

Katrina KarkazisORCID; Rebecca Jordan-Young

<jats:p>Ghost variables are variables in program languages that do not correspond to physical entities. This special issue, based on a panel on “Race as a Ghost Variable” at the 2017 Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science, traces ideas of “race” in particular niches of science, technology, and medicine where it is submerged and disavowed, yet wields power. Each paper is a case study exploring ghosts that emerge through the resonance among things as heterogeneous as hair patterns, hormone levels, food tastes, drug use, clinic locations, proximity to disaster, job classifications, and social belonging and suspicion, all of which vibrate with meanings accumulated over long racial histories. Together, the papers further elaborate methods and analytic models for identifying the operations of race—the relations and processes that make it, the effects that it has. A chief appeal of the metaphor of the ghost is that it brings the importance of history to the fore. Ghosts are simultaneously history and the present, not just an accretion of earlier experiences, but the palimpsest left when one tries to erase them. Sometimes faint and hard to discern, sometimes rambunctious and disruptive, ghosts refuse our attempts to simply move on.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Human-Computer Interaction; Economics and Econometrics; Sociology and Political Science; Philosophy; Social Sciences (miscellaneous); Anthropology.

Pp. 763-778

Constitutionalism at the Nexus of Life and Law

J. Benjamin Hurlbut; Sheila Jasanoff; Krishanu Saha

<jats:p>This essay introduces a collection of articles gathered under the theme of “law, science, and constitutions of life.” Together, they explore how revolutions in notions of what biological life is are eliciting correspondingly revolutionary imaginations of how life should be governed. The central theoretical contribution of the collection is to further elaborate the concept of bioconstitutionalism, which draws attention to especially consequential forms of coproduction at the law–life nexus. This introduction offers a theoretical discussion of bioconstitutionalism. It explores the constitutional significance of interplay between scientific and technological power over life and a given political community’s shared imaginary of what modes of reasoning, judgment, and rule are proper and legitimate in a well-ordered state. It argues that knowing what life is for purposes of governance does not follow from scientific knowledge alone. Rather, such knowledge is refracted through culturally distinctive imaginaries that commit societies to particular understandings of what life means and what should be done to encourage its flourishing.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Human-Computer Interaction; Economics and Econometrics; Sociology and Political Science; Philosophy; Social Sciences (miscellaneous); Anthropology.

Pp. 979-1000

Bioconstitutional Imaginaries and the Comparative Politics of Genetic Self-knowledge

J. Benjamin Hurlbut; Ingrid Metzler; Luca Marelli; Sheila Jasanoff

<jats:p>Genetic testing has become a vehicle through which basic constitutional relationships between citizens and the state are revisited, reaffirmed, or rearticulated. The interplay between the is of genetic knowledge and the ought of government unfolds in the context of diverse imaginaries of the forms of human well-being, freedom, and flourishing that states have a duty to support. This article examines how the United Kingdom, Germany, and the United States governed testing for Alzheimer’s disease, and how they diverged in defining potential harms, benefits, and objects of regulation. Comparison before and after the arrival of direct-to-consumer genetic tests reveals differences in national understandings of what it means to protect life and citizenship: in the United Kingdom, ensuring physical wellness through clinical utility; in the United States, protecting both citizens’ physical well-being and freedom to choose through a framework of consumer protection; and in Germany, emphasizing individual flourishing and an unburdened sense of human development that is expressed in genetic testing law and policy as a commitment to the stewardship of personhood. Operating with their own visions of what it means to protect life and citizenship, these three states arrived at settlements that coproduced substantially different bioconstitutional regimes around Alzheimer’s testing.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Human-Computer Interaction; Economics and Econometrics; Sociology and Political Science; Philosophy; Social Sciences (miscellaneous); Anthropology.

Pp. 1087-1118

Globalizing the Scientific Bandwagon: Trajectories of Precision Medicine in China and Brazil

Larry Au; Renan Gonçalves Leonel da Silva

<jats:p>Precision medicine (PM) is emerging as a scientific bandwagon within the contemporary biomedical sciences in the United States. PM brings together concepts and tools from genomics and bioinformatics to develop better diagnostics and therapies based on individualized information. Developing countries like China and Brazil have also begun pursuing PM projects, motivated by a desire to claim genomic sovereignty over its population. In spite of commonalities, institutional arrangements produced by the history of genomics research in China and Brazil are ushering PM along different trajectories. In the Chinese case, we identify a strong state-backed push for PM combined with a dynamic network of international academic and private actors along the lines of networked technonationalism that has made large-scale, speculative PM projects possible. The Brazilian case is characterized by an institutional void at the federal level in which PM is driven by domestic academic actors in universities in the regional level, resulting in smaller scale, needs-driven PM projects. Through these cases, this paper shows how a scientific bandwagon adapts to national histories and institutions. Through this peripheral translation of the scientific bandwagon, the global infrastructure of biomedical knowledge has the potential to be transformed.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Human-Computer Interaction; Economics and Econometrics; Sociology and Political Science; Philosophy; Social Sciences (miscellaneous); Anthropology.

Pp. 192-225

Working with Infrastructural Communities: A Material Participation Approach to Urban Retrofit

Charlotte JohnsonORCID; Sarah Bell; Aiduan Borrion; Rob Comber

<jats:p> Retrofit is a rising area of concern for Science and Technology Studies (STS) scholars of infrastructure. This paper sits at the junction between applied and theoretical approaches by using STS to support interventions in urban infrastructure systems and expand STS critique of retrofit. It discusses findings from a multidisciplinary project piloting retrofit possibilities to positively impact the way water, energy, and food resources were consumed in a London housing estate. Through qualitative research, we found that residents were making social and material interventions in infrastructure systems to manage the way resources were consumed at home, driven by a commonly held motivation to avoid wastefulness. We then mapped the social and material factors that helped or hindered these individual ambitions and used them to inform our codesign process. We found it helpful to think of the residents as an infrastructural community; a group of residents that share a material connection that can help mobilize collective action on shared consumption. We suggest this concept is useful for interventions and critiques of infrastructure retrofit, particularly in cities in the Global North where retrofit programs aim to rescale national systems to neighborhood levels. The concept highlights the possibilities for participation that emerge from bottom-up retrofit. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Human-Computer Interaction; Economics and Econometrics; Sociology and Political Science; Philosophy; Social Sciences (miscellaneous); Anthropology.

Pp. 320-345

Who Gets to Choose? On the Socio-algorithmic Construction of Choice

Dan M. KotliarORCID

<jats:p> This article deals with choice-inducing algorithms––algorithms that are explicitly designed to affect people’s choices. Based on an ethnographic account of three Israeli data analytics companies, I explore how algorithms are being designed to drive people into choice-making and examine their co-constitution by an assemblage of specifically positioned human and nonhuman agents. I show that the functioning, logic, and even ethics of choice-inducing algorithms are deeply influenced by the epistemologies, meaning systems, and practices of the individuals who devise and use them and that such algorithms are similarly affected by interorganizational relationships, various nonhuman agents, and changing geopolitical contexts. I conclude by discussing the flexibility of choice-inducing algorithms and by arguing that such algorithms are not programmed to induce specific choices but to more generally convert people into choosers, and thus, to algorithmically (re)create the modern need to choose. This article contributes to the growing literature on algorithms and culture and to our understanding of choice-making in contemporary life. At the same time, it provides a new vocabulary that offers to critically engage with algorithms and their power without losing sight of the often very specific contexts from which they arise. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Human-Computer Interaction; Economics and Econometrics; Sociology and Political Science; Philosophy; Social Sciences (miscellaneous); Anthropology.

Pp. 346-375

Misoprostol: The Social Life of a Life-saving Drug in Global Maternal Health

Margaret E. MacDonaldORCID

<jats:p> This paper is about a drug called misoprostol and its controversial clinical and social lives. Although originally developed as a prevention for gastric ulcers, in the 1980s, it developed an off-label reputation as an abortifacient. The drug’s association with clandestine abortion has profoundly shaped its social life as a marginal and suspect character in the realm of global maternal and reproductive health where it has the potential to prevent two major causes of maternal death––postpartum hemorrhage and unsafe abortion. The social life of misoprostol has also been shaped by the question of authoritative practice, that is, the question of who can deliver medicine. Both issues are about the specters of misuse of misoprostol: off-label, illegal, immoral, or by unlicensed providers. In this paper, I focus ethnographically on two women’s health nongovernmental organizations that have been conducting clinical testing and advocacy for the use of misoprostol for reproductive indications in global maternal health settings. Drawing on the notions of pharmaceutical activism and protocol feminism, I describe and analyze how the tools of evidence and authoritative practice have been reassembled in new networks of expertise toward the social justice goals of life, access, and dignity for women. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Human-Computer Interaction; Economics and Econometrics; Sociology and Political Science; Philosophy; Social Sciences (miscellaneous); Anthropology.

Pp. 376-401

“The Grievance Studies Affair” Project: Reconstructing and Assessing the Experimental Design

Mikko LagerspetzORCID

<jats:p> Recently, high media visibility was reached by an experiment that involved “hoaxlike deception” of journals within humanities and social sciences. Its aim was to provide evidence of “inadequate” quality standards especially within gender studies. The article discusses the project in the context of both previous systematic studies of peer reviewing and scientific hoaxes and analyzes its possible empirical outcomes. Despite claims to the contrary, the highly political, both ethically and methodologically flawed “experiment” failed to provide the evidence it sought. The experiences can be summed up as follows: (1) journals with higher impact factors were more likely to reject papers submitted as part of the project; (2) the chances were better, if the manuscript was allegedly based on empirical data; (3) peer reviews can be an important asset in the process of revising a manuscript; and (4) when the project authors, with academic education from neighboring disciplines, closely followed the reviewers’ advice, they were able to learn relatively quickly what is needed for writing an acceptable article. The boundary between a seriously written paper and a “hoax” gradually became blurred. Finally (5), the way the project ended showed that in the long run, the scientific community will uncover fraudulent practices. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Human-Computer Interaction; Economics and Econometrics; Sociology and Political Science; Philosophy; Social Sciences (miscellaneous); Anthropology.

Pp. 402-424

Crash Theory: Entrapments of Conservation Drones and Endangered Megafauna

Adam FishORCID

<jats:p> Drones deployed to monitor endangered species often crash. These crashes teach us that using drones for conservation is a contingent practice ensnaring humans, technologies, and animals. This article advances a crash theory in which pilots, conservation drones, and endangered megafauna are relata, or related actants, that intra-act, cocreating each other and a mutually constituted phenomena. These phenomena are entangled, with either reciprocal dependencies or erosive entrapments. The crashing of conservation drones and endangered species requires an ethics of care, repair, or reworlding. Diffractions, disruptions that expose difference, result from crashes and reveal the precarious manner by which technologies, laws, and discourses bring nature and culture together. To support crash theory, this article presents three ethnographic cases. A drone crash in the United Kingdom near white rhinoceroses while building machine learning training data exhibits the involvement of the electromagnetic spectrum; the threat of crashes in the Pacific Northwest near Puget Sound orcas discloses the impacts of drone laws; and drone crashes in Sri Lanka among Asian elephants presents the problems of technoliberal ideals around programming natural worlds. Throughout the article, a methodology is developed, parallelism, which attends to the material similarities in lateral phenomena. </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Human-Computer Interaction; Economics and Econometrics; Sociology and Political Science; Philosophy; Social Sciences (miscellaneous); Anthropology.

Pp. 425-451