A Place for Science and Technology Studies

Observation, Intervention, and Collaboration

An exploration of science and technology studies in eight different places, and the possibilities that arise for observation, intervention, and collaboration.

Where does science and technology studies (STS) belong? In A Place for Science and Technology Studies, Jane Calvert takes readers through eight different rooms—the laboratory, the conference room, the classroom, the coffee room, the art studio, the bioethics building, the policy room, and the ivory tower—investigating the possibilities and limitations of each for STS research.

Drawing from over a decade of work in synthetic biology, Calvert explores three different orientations for STS—observation, intervention, and collaboration—to ask whether there is a place for STS, which, as an undisciplined field, often finds itself on the periphery of traditional institutions or dependent on more generously funded STEM disciplines. Using examples of failures and successes and tackling enduring concerns about the relations between social scientific researchers and their fields of study, Calvert argues for an approach to STS that is collaborative yet allows for autonomy.
PREFACE ix
INTRODUCTION: WHY ROOMS? 1


1 THE LABORATORY 21
2 THE CONFERENCE ROOM 37
3 THE CLASSROOM 61
4 THE COFFEE ROOM 83
5 THE ART STUDIO 95
6 THE BIOETHICS BUILDING 117
7 THE POLICY ROOM 135
8 THE IVORY TOWER 159


CONCLUSIONS: TOWARD A COLLABORATIVE SCIENCE
AND TECHNOLOGY STUDIES 173


NOTES 183
REFERENCES 191
INDEX 21
Jane Calvert is Professor of Science and Technology Studies at the University of Edinburgh. She is the coauthor of Synthetic Aesthetics: Investigating Synthetic Biology’s Designs on Nature (MIT Press).

About

An exploration of science and technology studies in eight different places, and the possibilities that arise for observation, intervention, and collaboration.

Where does science and technology studies (STS) belong? In A Place for Science and Technology Studies, Jane Calvert takes readers through eight different rooms—the laboratory, the conference room, the classroom, the coffee room, the art studio, the bioethics building, the policy room, and the ivory tower—investigating the possibilities and limitations of each for STS research.

Drawing from over a decade of work in synthetic biology, Calvert explores three different orientations for STS—observation, intervention, and collaboration—to ask whether there is a place for STS, which, as an undisciplined field, often finds itself on the periphery of traditional institutions or dependent on more generously funded STEM disciplines. Using examples of failures and successes and tackling enduring concerns about the relations between social scientific researchers and their fields of study, Calvert argues for an approach to STS that is collaborative yet allows for autonomy.

Table of Contents

PREFACE ix
INTRODUCTION: WHY ROOMS? 1


1 THE LABORATORY 21
2 THE CONFERENCE ROOM 37
3 THE CLASSROOM 61
4 THE COFFEE ROOM 83
5 THE ART STUDIO 95
6 THE BIOETHICS BUILDING 117
7 THE POLICY ROOM 135
8 THE IVORY TOWER 159


CONCLUSIONS: TOWARD A COLLABORATIVE SCIENCE
AND TECHNOLOGY STUDIES 173


NOTES 183
REFERENCES 191
INDEX 21

Author

Jane Calvert is Professor of Science and Technology Studies at the University of Edinburgh. She is the coauthor of Synthetic Aesthetics: Investigating Synthetic Biology’s Designs on Nature (MIT Press).

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