Showing posts with label STS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label STS. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 05, 2015

Bibliography:

Just found this wonderful paper and list of relevant literature: http://eprints.ncrm.ac.uk/3219/
Social Studies of Social Science: A Working Bibliography
Mair, Michael and Greiffenhagen, C. and Sharrock, W. (2013) Social Studies of Social Science: A Working Bibliography. NCRM Working Paper. NCRM. (Unpublished)
"The social sciences are currently going through a reflexive phase, one marked by the appearance of a wave of studies which approach their disciplines’ own methods and research practices as their empirical subject matter. Driven partly by a growing interest in knowledge production and partly by a desire to make the social sciences ‘fit-for-purpose’ in the digital era, these studies seek to reinvigorate debates around methods by treating them as embedded social and cultural phenomena with their own distinctive biographical trajectories – or “social lives”. Empirical studies of social scientific work and the role of methods within it, however, remain relatively scarce. There are several reasons for this but, for one thing, it can be difficult to find examples of how such studies might be undertaken. This contribution draws together a literature scattered across various social science disciplines and their sub-fields in which social science methods have been studied empirically. We hope this working bibliography will provide a useful resource for those who wish to undertake such studies in the future. We also hope to show that the more recent literature can be connected to, and stands to be informed by, a much broader literature. We do not pretend that our bibliography is complete and comprehensive but we do think it represents a starting point for those who wish to pursue these issues for themselves."

Thursday, October 25, 2007

List by Tereza Stöckelova

Aagaard-Hansen, Jens. 2007. The Challenges of Cross-disciplinary Research. Social Epistemology Vol. 21, No. 4, October–December 2007, pp. 425–438.

Goode, Jackie. 2006. Research Identities: Reflections of a Contract Researcher. Sociological Research Online, 11, 2.
http://www.socresonline.org.uk/11/2/goode.html

Schaffer, Simon. 1994. From physics to anthropology - and back again.
Prickly Pear Pamphlet, no.3. Cambridge: Prickly pear press.

Anthony King. 2007. The Sociology of Sociology. Philosophy of the Social Sciences 2007; 37; 501

Law, John. 2004. After Method: Mess in Social Science Research. London: Routledge.

Law, John, John Urry. 2004. Enacting the social. Economy and Society 33(3): 390–410.

Javier Lezaun (2007) A market of opinions: the political epistemology of focus groups. The Sociological Review 55 (s2), 130–151.

Mesny, Anne. 1998. Sociology for whom? The role of sociology in reflexive modernity. Canadian journal of sociology 23(2-3): 159-178.

Mesny, Anne. 1998. The appropriation of social science knowledge by „lay people“: the development of lay sociological imagination? Dissertation thesis, University of Cambridge.

Robbins, Derek. 2007. Sociology as Reflexive Science: On Bourdieu’s Project. Theory, Culture & Society 2007 (SAGE, Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, and Singapore),
Vol. 24(5): 77–98

Piercing the reality: http://piercingthereality.wordpress.com/