Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label conference. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Research Evaluation for the Social Sciences and the Humanities RESSH 2015

The EvalHum Initiative is pleased to open the call for papers for its first international conference on Research Evaluation in the Social Sciences and the Humanities (RESSH), to be held at the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme en Bretagne in Rennes, France, from the 4th to 6th June 2015.

This major conference follows a highly successful international workshop on Quality in Humanities Research held in Rennes in June 2014, as part of the QualiSHS project, supported by the French network of Humanities Institutes, the Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, as well as a series of meetings held within the context of the EvalHum Initiative. The aim of this event is to bring together a wide range of researchers and stakeholders interested in questions of research evaluation and the societal impact of the Social Sciences and the Humanities (SSH).

Evalhum is an open initiative, aiming at promoting the study of SSH research and increasing its visibility among scholars of other fields and disciplines, the lay public and stakeholders and decision makers. Evaluation appears as an interesting tool to achieve this.

Saturday, May 31, 2014

The role of social science and humanities in addressing global challenges



ESOF 2014
16:30 - 17:45 , June 24 2014
Dipylon Hall, Carlsberg Museum
https://esof2014.pathable.com/#meetings/174650

The future of Europe is increasingly determined by the ability of its governments, industries and citizens to integrate and deploy knowledge through economic, societal and cultural measures. Policy makers look towards science to find solutions to the grand challenges of our time such as climate change, energy and food security, and sustainable resources. Sustainable approaches to those challenges will need cooperation among the natural, social and human sciences. Social science and humanities have the tools to analyse social, political and economic processes, and transfer new knowledge and innovative solutions among individuals and institutions. Even the basic capacity to acknowledge and define a societal challenge is co-shaped by socioeconomic analysis.

We will address where this research is headed and how best to make visible the societal relevance of the human and social sciences. We will present an exclusive medley of recent reports and initiatives mapping the outcomes of this research.


Speakers:

Kirsten Drotner, Science Europe
Poul Holm, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland
Wim van den Doel, Faculty of Humanities - Leiden University

Discussant: Liviu Matei, Central European University

Moderator: Vincent Hendricks, University of Copenhagen

Session organiser: David Budtz Pedersen, University of Copenhagen; Katja Mayer, University of Vienna, Austria

ESOF 2014 - Mapping Social Sciences and Humanities

June 23 2014 (15:00 - 16:15) 
Carlsberg Museum/The Dance Halls, Copenhagen, DK 

Speakers: 
Andrea Scharnhorst, Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS, NL) 
Jürgen Pfeffer, Carnegie Mellon School of Computer Science, USA 
Gunnar Sivertsen, Nordisk Institutt for Studier av Innovasjon, Forskning 
og Utdanning (NIFU) 

Discussant: Katja Mayer, University of Vienna 
Moderator: Frederik Stjernfelt, University of Copenhagen 

Session description 
https://esof2014.pathable.com/#meetings/174621 

Session organisers: David Budtz Pedersen, University of Copenhagen; 
Katja Mayer, University of Vienna 

Mapping scientific fields and research areas is of growing interest to 
scientists, policymakers, funding agencies and industry. Computation of 
bibliometric data such as co-authorships, co-citation analysis, 
cross-disciplinary collaborations, and inter-institutional networks 
supply coherent visual maps of the research landscape. Research in the 
social sciences and humanities is often difficult to map and survey, 
since these fields are embedded in diverse and often diverging epistemic 
cultures. Some are specifically bound to local contexts, languages and 
terminologies, and the domain lacks global referencing bodies and 
dictionaries. Mapping scientific activity and understanding 
interdisciplinary exchanges requires researchers to go beyond 
traditional statistical methods, such as co-citation analysis, and 
develop new semantic technologies such as topic models, natural language 
processing, as well as survey-based studies. 
We will explore how combinations and variations of science mapping 
approaches can provide a productive basis for studies of research 
characteristics in the humanities and social sciences. 

Euroscience Open Forum (ESOF) is Europe’s largest interdisciplinary 
science conference. It takes place every second year in a major European 
city. ESOF2014 consists of a global forum for discussions on topical 
issues in science and humanities complemented by an ambitious outreach 
programme with a large number of events. The conference takes place at 
the Carlsberg City District, Copenhagen June 23-26, 2014 
(http://esof2014.org). About 4,500 participants from more than 70 
countries are present at the conference. The Science in the City 
festival is expected to attract more than 30.000 citizens to the free 
activities. 

Presentation of Andrea Scharnhorst here

Wednesday, May 07, 2014

Conference: Critical Issues in STS, May 2014

http://www.ifz.tugraz.at/ias/IAS-STS/Upcoming-Activities/STS-Conference-Graz-2014

Special Session 9:
- Special Session 9: From STS to SSH: Translating STS concepts for the study of social sciences and humanities (SSH)
 (Matthias Duller & Rafael Schögler, Department of Sociology, University of Graz)
 The relation between STS on the one hand, and historical and contemporary studies of the social sciences and humanities (SSH) on the other has received surprisingly little attention so far. One reason might be the widespread view among social scientists that the argument of sociality of scientific knowledge, of primary importance in STS, is self-evident or even trivial in the case of SSH. While it is true that the explosive power behind the rise of STS during the 1970s and 1980s was drawn from sociological explanations of knowledge making, STS has since developed a considerable number of conceptual, methodological and thematic innovations that go well beyond the sheer claim of the social character of scientific knowledge. In recognition of recent publications that call explicitly for an integration of STS concepts to the study of knowledge making in SSH (Camic, Gross, and Lamont 2011), we want to explore the potentials and possible pitfalls of such a transfer more thoroughly.
In particular, we see two contexts of inquiry where a translation of STS concepts to SSH seems especially rewarding. One is the typical concern of STS for the local contexts in which ideas are being developed. This view is usually associated with the emphasis on every-day practices and already informs a number of recent studies in the history and sociology of SSH. Some of which are collected in Camic, Gross, and Lamont 2011. The second context concerns the various relationships of the sciences (both natural and social) with the non-scientific world, referring both to the impacts of scientific activities on society at large and the impacts of societal changes and society onto practices of knowledge making. While being a subject of eminent importance in STS, no comparatively systematic analyses exist for SSH in this respect.
The papers can deal with these or related questions of how STS perspectives can be fruitfully applied to the study of SSH, thereby reassessing the relation between STS and the traditional disciplines of the SSH. Proposals are welcome both from STS and SSH and can be conceptual discussions, case studies or well-founded research proposals.

SS9: From STS to SSH: Translating STS concepts for 
the study of social sciences and humanities (SSH) 

(Chairs: Matthias Duller and Rafael Schögler) 

  • -The Subject-Object-Relationship in the Social Sciences – The Epistemic Participation of the Analyzed, Werner Reichmann 
  • Prospects for the science and technology studies concept ‘boundary-work’ in studies of social sciences and humanities, Pia Vuolanto 
  • Wandering off the Beaten Path: An STS Study of Sociology, Emils Kilis
  • Horizons of Social Sciences and Humanities in European Research Funding – a story of multiple enactments, Katja Mayer 
  • Europeanizing Social Science - The case of the European Social Survey, Kristoffer Kropp 
  • Explanation of prejudice in contemporary Hungarian sociology. A case study, Judit Gárdos

Workshop "Neue Felder der Wissenschaftsforschung"

Call for Papers  - Neue Felder der Wissenschaftsforschung: 

linguistische, medienwissenschaftliche und soziologische Zugänge

Workshop des DFG-Graduiertenkollegs 1769 Locating Media für Nachwuchswissenschaftler_innen 
mit Prof. Dr. Gerd Fritz und Dr. Christian Greiffenhagen

Senatssaal, Adolf-Reichwein-Campus
Universität Siegen, 13. und 14. November 2014 

Neben den zahlreichen Gegenständen der wissenschaftlichen Forschung, untersuchen verschiedene Fachwissenschaften das wissenschaftliche Handeln selbst. Nach der langen philosophischen Tradition der Wissenschaftstheorie haben seit den 1970ern die Wissenschaftsgeschichte und -soziologie und seit den 1990er Jahren auch die Linguistik und Medienwissenschaft den Gegenstand Wissenschaft disziplinär für sich erschlossen.
Während die Wissenschaftssoziologie, insbesondere mit den Laboratory Studies und der Sociology of Scientific Knowledge, naturwissenschaftliche Praktiken der Erkenntnisproduktion im Labor und in wissenschaftlichen Kontroversen untersuchte, wenden sich aktuelle Ansätze (Social Studies of Social Science) nun auch der sozialwissenschaftlichen Forschungspraxis als wissenschaftssoziologischem Gegenstand zu. Dabei versuchen diese Forschungen – wie die Laboratory Studies – die spezifischen praktischen Medien und Methoden der Erkenntnisproduktion empirisch zu untersuchen und die konstruktiven Leistungen sozialwissenschaftlicher Erkenntnisproduktion (als Konstrukte zweiter Ordnung) nachzuweisen.

Die Linguistik der Wissenschaftssprachen ist einerseits an der Didaktik und andererseits an den epistemologischen Potentialen unterschiedlicher Wissenschaftssprachen interessiert und steht damit entschieden für eine wissenschaftliche Mehrsprachigkeit ein. Daneben thematisiert sie aber auch historische und gegenwärtige Entwicklungen in der Wissenschaftskommunikation (Kontroversenforschung) in unterschiedlichen medialen Settings; nicht zuletzt auch in Settings der Hochschulkommunikation.
Mit dem Thema „Medien der Wissenschaften“ (Jahrestagung 2013) betonte die Gesellschaft für Medienwissenschaft die Bedeutung einer medienwissenschaftlichen Perspektive für die Untersuchung wissenschaftlicher Prozesse und vertieft damit den Blick auf die medialen Bedingungen und Infrastrukturen wissenschaftlicher Erkenntnisse: ihrer Produktion, Transformation und Stabilisierung durch Medienpraxis.
Diesen soziologischen, linguistischen und medienwissenschaftlichen Ansätzen folgend, sollen auf dem Workshop Forschungsvorhaben oder -ergebnisse präsentiert und diskutiert werden. Dabei erscheint uns ein interdisziplinärer Dialog zwischen diesen Ansätzen und die Verbindungs- und Übersetzungsarbeit zwischen den Disziplinen unerlässlich, will man den Gegenstand exhaustiv untersuchen. Es gilt also, dass Zusammenwirken von Sprachlichkeit und Soziotechnik der Wissenschaften sowie das Entfalten von Kommunikations- und Erkenntnisprozess aus der Perspektive der Wissenschaftsforschung genauer auszuloten. Dafür soll dieser interdisziplinäre Workshop einen Raum bieten. Folgende Bereiche können durch einzelne Beiträge auf dem Workshop adressiert werden:
  • Praktiken der Erkenntnisproduktion (z.B. interaktive Prozesse: Datenproduktion, Digital Humanities-Praktiken, Anwendung von Forschungssoftware, Lesen und Schreiben von wissenschaftlichen Publikationen etc.)
  • Praktiken des Kommunizierens (z.B. neuere Entwicklungen der digitalen Wissenschaftskommunikation: Weblogs, Twitter, neue Vortrags- oder Festschriftformen, Open Access (Repositories), Open Peer Review; (historisch) ältere Kommunikationspraktiken: Zeitschriften, Monografien, wissenschaftliche Gattungen, Untersuchungen zur alltäglichen Wissenschaftssprache etc.)
  • Praktiken der Infrastrukturierung: Medialisierende Infrastrukturen liegen letztlich den beiden obigen Praktiken zugrunde und sind handlungspraktisch hervorzubringen und aufrecht zu erhalten.
Wir laden Nachwuchswissenschaftler_innen der Linguistik, Medienwissenschaften und Soziologie ein, uns bis zum 1. Juli 2014 auf max. einer Seite ihr Forschungsvorhaben und das Format ihrer Präsentation (Präsentation von Forschungsergebnissen oder Diskussion von empirischem Material – bitte mit einer Beschreibung des jeweiligen Materials) in dt. Sprache zu skizzieren. Wir freuen uns, mitteilen zu können, dass wir Gerd Fritz (Gießen) und Christian Greiffenhagen (Loughborough) dafür gewinnen konnten, den Workshop mit zwei Vorträgen zu eröffnen und theoretisch zu rahmen.

Christian Meier zu Verl & Matthias Meiler

Kontakt:

Matthias Meiler, M.A.
DFG-Graduiertenkolleg Locating Media
Universität Siegen
Artur-Woll-Haus, Am Eichenhang 50
57076 Siegen
Tel.: 0271 740 3057
meiler@locatingmedia.uni-siegen.de

Saturday, January 18, 2014

CFP: History of Recent Social Science, ENS Cachan, France

CALL FOR PAPERS


FIRST ANNUAL CONFERENCE ON THE HISTORY OF RECENT SOCIAL SCIENCE (HISRESS)

École normale supérieure de Cachan, France

13-14 June 2014

This two-day conference will bring together researchers working on the history of post-World War II social science. It will provide a forum for the latest research on the cross-disciplinary history of the post-war social sciences, including but not limited to anthropology, economics, psychology, political science, and sociology as well as related fields like area studies, communication studies, history, international relations, law and linguistics.

We are especially eager to receive submissions that treat themes, topics, and events that span the history of individual disciplines.

The conference aims to build upon the recent emergence of work and conversation on cross-disciplinary themes in the postwar history of the social sciences. A number of monographs, edited collections, special journal issues, and gatherings at the École normale supérieure de Cachan, Duke University, the London School of Economics, New York University, the University of Toronto and elsewhere testify to a growing interest in the developments spanning the social sciences in the early, late, and post-Cold War periods. Most history of social science scholarship, however, remains focused on the 19th and early 20th centuries, and attuned to the histories of individual disciplines. Though each of the major social science fields now has a community of disciplinary historians, research explicitly concerned with cross-disciplinary topics remains comparatively rare. The purpose of the conference is to further encourage the limited but fruitful cross-disciplinary conversations of recent years.

A related purpose is to consider the creation of a Society for the History of Recent Social Science, with the aim to bring together scholars working in the area on an annual basis.

Submissions are welcome in areas such as:

- The uptake of social science concepts and figures in wider intellectual and popular discourses

- Comparative institutional histories of departments and programs

- Border disputes and boundary work between disciplines as well as academic cultures

- Themes and concepts developed in the history and sociology of natural and physical science, reconceptualized for the social science context

- Professional and applied training programs and schools, and the quasi-disciplinary fields (like business administration) that typically housed them

- The role of social science in post-colonial state-building governance

- Social science adaptations to the changing media landscape

- The role and prominence of disciplinary memory in a comparative context

The two-day conference, hosted at the École normale supérieure de Cachan, 15 minutes from Paris, will be organized as a series of one-hour, single-paper sessions attended by all participants. Ample time will be set aside for intellectual exchange between presenters and attendees, as all participants are expected to read pre-circulated papers in advance.

Proposals should contain roughly 1000 words, indicating the originality of the paper. The deadline for receipt of abstracts is 31 January 2014. Proposals will be evaluated by mid Febuary and final notification will be given in late February. Completed papers will be expected by May 15, 2014.

The organizing committee consists of Jamie Cohen-Cole (George Washington University), Philippe Fontaine (ENS Cachan), Nicolas Guilhot (CIRHUS - NYU), and Jeff Pooley (Muhlenberg College).

All proposals and requests for information should be sent to: philippe.fontaine@ens-cachan.fr

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Horizons for Social Sciences and Humanities - Conference and Consultation


The Lithuanian Presidency of the EU is currently preparing a conference to discuss the new role of Socio-economic Sciences and Humanities SSH in the new EU research funding programme, Horizon2020, which will be launched at the end of this year. The conference will take place in Vilnius on 23-24 September 2013 (http://horizons.mruni.eu/).

The conference's steering committee has decided to launch an online consultation on how to shape the roles of SSH in “Horizon 2020”. The objective is to learn more about the current situation and the ambitions of the research community, but also to identify the needs and structural problems of specific fields, with an emphasis on their potential to contribute to the success of the Vision Europe 2020.

The consultation is circulated to the wider SSH research community, irrespective of whether individuals or institutions are already active in EU-funded research, but also to those SSH communities that have not yet been involved in EU-funding.  This may include researchers who are based outside Europe but are in cooperation with colleagues in Europe.

Results of the consultation will be made publicly accessible. They will also provide valuable input for the planned Vilnius declaration on “Horizons for Social Sciences and Humanities”.


The five questions to be answered until June 15th 2013 can be found here:

Tuesday, October 06, 2009

CRESC Conference 2010 CFP: The Social Life of Methods

http://www.cresc.ac.uk/events/conference2010/callforpapers.html

6th Annual Conference 2010: The Social Life Of Methods
31 August - 3 September, St Hugh's College Oxford

CFP

During the past century and longer, social scientific methods have come to be extensively deployed in government, administration and business, as well as in academic research. Maps, enumerations, surveys, interviews, indicators, software and visualizations proliferate. The aim of this conference is to consider how we can best understand the agency of social science methods in both shaping, and themselves being affected, by economic, social and cultural change, both historically and in the current context when digitalization poses specific challenges to established repertoires of social science methods.

Mindful of the ideas developed within Science and Technology Studies, which show how objects in the natural and medical sciences can be social agents, we seek to broaden this agenda to focus more particularly on methods within the social sciences and humanities. Papers are invited from interdisciplinary audiences addressing the following issues:

  • Is it useful to explore how agency can be located in certain kinds of social scientific methodological repertoires?
  • What kinds of methods succeed and which fail? What are the respective powers of different sorts of qualitative and quantitative forms of analysis? How can we explain why certain sorts of methods become hegemonic in certain domains, and what consequences follow from this?
  • What is the role of the visual in social science methods? How is this changing?
  • With the proliferation of digital data, are we currently seeing a crisis of standard social science methods based around the sample survey and the interview, and what does this portend for our understanding of socio-cultural change? Does the idea of a descriptive turn offer a useful way of grasping the role of these new methods?
  • What is the transformative and critical potential of social science research methods, both historically and today?

We are interested in using reflecting theoretically about how actor network theory, genealogy, complexity theory, feminist theory, anthropological studies of expertise, ecological studies of knowledge, political economy and field analysis can be used to understand and illuminate these issues. There will be four themes which will structure the sessions of the conference:

1: The device: what kinds of device have come to play an important historical role, and which have failed? How can we better understand the histories of nations, social groups, individuals and organizations through a focus on devices?
2: The challenge of digital data: what is the implication of the proliferation of digital information for the ordering of economic, social, political and cultural knowledge?
3: Envisaging the visual: how have visual methods historically competed with textual and numerical methods, and how far is their role changing in the current context?
4: Transformative practice: history, discipline and movements: how can methods be mobilized to critique and challenge dominant methodological repertoires, focusing especially on the role of historical analysis, ethnographic, feminist, and subaltern methods?

Please submit either (a) proposal for individual papers, or (b) panel proposal including 3 papers by the end of February 2010.

CRESC Conference Administration, 178 Waterloo Place, Oxford Road, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, Tel: +44(0)161 275 8985 / Fax: +44(0)161 275 8985

Conference: The Future of Social Sciences and Humanities, Oct 22-23 2009, Brussels

http://www.iccr-international.org/events/2009/2009-10-2223.html

At the final conference of the SSH-FUTURES project commissioned by DG Research in the 6th Framework Programme in Brussels in October a workshop will be held on the topic of ‘The Future of Social Sciences and Humanities’. The conference will be a two-day event held. On the first day, the members of the SSH-FUTURES consortium will present the results of their study and discuss potential recommendations and conclusions. The second day will be devoted to the results of similar projects.

The main objective of the workshop is to discuss:

  • the achievement of Social Sciences and Humanities so far,
  • the potential of inter- and transdisciplinary research,
  • facilitators for and barriers to increasing the efficiency and effectiveness of the Social Sciences and Humanities,
  • the expectations of policy makers, NGOs and other funding organizations of the Social Sciences and Humanities and their potential to respond to these expectations.

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Session Report EASST/4S 2008 Rotterdam

(The following text is taken from the paper "Acting with Social Sciences and Humanities" in EASST Review FEB. 2009 - full text is available here: http://www.easst.net/review/feb2009/mayer or here to discuss: http://www1.svt.ntnu.no/forum/easst/viewtopic.php?f=15&t=46 )

Our section comprised of 3 sessions and a total of 13 presentations. In order not to impose a “grand narrative” on the quite heterogeneous set of lectures, I will be following the order of appearance, to open up the broad range of subjects that were addressed. But let me introduce you to the different session beforehand: In the first session “Impact, Co-Shaping and Reflexivity” the presentations analysed what happens with knowledge developed in the social sciences and humanities when it goes beyond the (core) scientific community: how it is used, translated, and made sense of e.g. in the conduct of psychological experiments (Derksen). Some papers focused on the role of social sciences in research projects or institutions they themselves are involved in (Bister, Dunn), or focused on social sciences within multidisciplinary research sites (Dunn) resp. in science communications (Phillips) and in the media and public debates (Plesner).

The second session “(Politics of) Methods and Complicity" was dedicated to methodological issues and their relevance in regard to research politics and research outcomes. The papers focused on performativity and aesthetics of social science methods (Mayer), elaborated on the role and position of a researcher being simultaneously inside and outside his/her field of study (Wöhrer, Stegmaier), and/or included further reflections on political implications of different methodological and theoretical approaches (Mager).

The papers of the third session, called “Inter-Disciplines”, dealt with different aspects of disciplinarity and interdisciplinarity. One paper focused on perceptions and enactment of /inter/disciplinarity in a contemporary sociology department (Červinková/Stöckelová), two concentrated on cross-disciplinary collaborations (Connor, Dormans) and a further paper was on historical developments of interdisciplinary and participatory social research (Lezaun).

Another perspective on our section reveals roughly 2 main strands of presentations: some of us were on the one hand researchers reflecting on their own practice as (social) scientists or STS researchers; on the other hand some were researchers studying SSH as a full fledged empirical field.

Our first session was opened by Milena Bister (University of Vienna, Austria) and her reflections on the research setting in a STS project investigating informed consent to tissue donation at a university hospital in Austria. Stepping in this particular space of negotiation between biomedicine and society, her team of STS researchers actually came to parallel some of their methods (acts and movements in the hospital) with those of the biomedical project partners. For instance they as well had to ask for the patients’ consent to the social science interviews just as the biomedical team did for tissue donation. Bister showed that by exploring the realm of bioethics in acting with the whole procedure – proposing to the ethics committee, designing the IC form, conducting IC with the patients right after the biomedical IC, interviewing the patients - her team actually co-shaped and reinforced the dominant practices of informed consent, despite their overall critical standpoint.

Caroline Dunn (University of Melbourne, Australia) introduced us to the often-conflicting imaginations of the Other in her research about community attitudes towards forestry industry, which is part of a 7 year project at the co-operative research center. In reflecting ethnographically her own status in the complex meshwork of funders, forestry practioners as participants and other researchers in such an interdisciplinary collaboration, Dunn experienced the potential of negotiating the aims of her social scientific inquiry. By asking collaborators what they expect of her study, she positioned herself as well as her study horizontally within the collective knowledge production process. By letting her own status be questioned by other participants, Dunn could engage in new perspectives and develop otherwise ignored research questions.

Ursula Plesner (University of Roskilde, Denmark) argued in line with Latour (2005) and Lynch (2000) that reflexivity should be given back to actors, rather than being drawn upon as a routine methodological duty and feigned enhancement of validity. Plesner presented empirical materials of interviews with journalists and social scientists from her study on communication of social scientific knowledge via mass media. She marked out the fact that interviewer and interviewees are competent lay audiences for one another. Showing that the concept of “lay sociological imaginations” (Mesny 1998) can be used as a heuristic tool to understand the production of intimacy in interviews with fellow sociologists and journalists. Plesner proposed that we leave the normative concerns related to ‘studying down’, and use active interview techniques (Holstein, Gubrium) when we “study sideways”, conceiving of interviews as bilateral “meaning-making occasions”.

Louise Phillips (University of Roskilde, Denmark) brought with her transcriptions of meetings in a Danish research and development consultancy. The researcher-consultants in the consultancy under study attempt to operate on the basis of dialogic principles in the sense that they view the communication of knowledge as knowledge-sharing, interaction, dialogue or negotiation rather than the one-way, unilinear transmission of expert knowledge to a less knowledgeable target-group. In analysis of the transcriptions, Phillips applied an integrative approach combining dialogic communication theory and STS – to address the questions: What happens to social scientific knowledge when it is communicated dialogically? How are different knowledges produced, negotiated, challenged and transformed in the meeting between social scientific knowledges and other knowledge forms and the meeting between the researchers and other participating actors?


Maarten Derksen (University of Groningen, The Netherlands) presented a study of 'machinations' (Latour, 1988) in psychology, part of a larger project on social technology conducted together with Anne Beaulieu. Noting that studies of technology usually focus on machines, he argued that it has become urgent to explore the engineering of human behavior. His analysis focused on priming studies and automaticity theory, attempts to construct subjects as machines, not under the control of a free, rational self. Derksen showed that priming research nevertheless produces excess subjectivity, resistance to machination, and proposed this as a general feature of machinations in the social sciences


Our second session started with my presentation (Katja Mayer, University of Vienna, Austria) about the usage of network diagrams in the context of Social Network Analysis. With focusing on their embedding in and capacity of coupling with scientific as well as popular visual cultures, but also on the material and corporeal dimensions of the imaging process, I illustrated what I call the “epistemological desire of being touched by- and touching” objects of research. Traveling fingers on social topographies, rhetoric precision via metaphors to circumscribe pictorial ambivalences, ergonomic standardizations in color schemes, are enacting and animating social structures, and therefore should be regarded as authentic practices to produce scientific validity. I concluded that in studying scientific practices the body is not to be blinded out as automatism, rather it should be considered as present criterion and constant involvement.

Peter Stegmaier (University of Nijmegen, Netherlands) tackled his role as “embedded” social scientist in the Centre for Society and Genomics in Nijmegen. With its mission to understand and improve the interaction between genomics researchers and various other societal actors, this institution employs Stegmaier to carry out a “meta-project” on what is considered to be the framework approach of the center, namely, ELSA (for ethical, legal, social aspects of) Genomics. He described himself as a “re-informant” who cooperates with and studies the social scientist-managers and -researchers in this facility. “While the informant informs a stranger/outsider about an unknown world of insiders, the re-informant/outsider informs the insiders about their known world. The re-informant shows the unknown or neglected dimensions/aspects, and questions insider perspectives through estrangement.”, as Stegmaier phrased it. He observed the institution’s own condition of doing research and outreach and he pointed to unknown or neglected dimensions/aspects, and questioned self-evident perspectives through professionalized “estrangement” (Hirschauer 1994; Hirschauer/Amann 1997). With a reflexive, ethnographic approach Stegmaier sought to know “something from the inside and outside at the same time” (Hirschauer 1994).

Being a gender researcher herself Veronika Wöhrer (University of Vienna, Austria) found herself in conflicting attributions towards her own role in her investigation of international co-operations between gender researchers of four different national communities. In her presentation Wöhrer explored the ambivalence/mutuality of proximity and distance to the protagonists as “complicity” (Marcus 1998) and showed how she was constructed as Other by her “co-researchers” (Kitzinger /Wilkinson 1996;). In the awareness that they were sharing the same scientific field, she was perceived differently in each context, i.e. as “rich Westener”, “experienced gender researcher”, “poor student” or “badly prepared foreigner”, which brought her to re-conceptualize her own assumptions about the respective “others” in the different field sites. She argues for more explicit reflections of one's own entanglements with the field, especially when researching (social) scientists, to contribute to what Bourdieu called a "reflexive sociology" (Bourdieu 1988).

Drawing on recent work in Actor-Network Theory (Law 2004, Mol 2002), Astrid Mager (University of Vienna, Austria) reflected on the different methods employed in her study on online health information and how they differently enacted “the web”. Taking in the standpoint of website providers the web was shaped as a network of clear-cut websites understood as coherent information packages linked to a specific actor. Taking in the standpoint of users the web was performed as assemblage of disconnected pieces of information organized around specific issues primarily by the search engine Google. Mager further asked what the political implications of the various methods chosen are in terms of “ontological politics” (Mol 2002). She elaborated that focusing on website providers tends to enact the web as a de-central actor-network that may strengthen the rhetoric of democracy widely attached to the web especially in its early days. Following users, in contrast, shapes the web as a Google-organized space that may underline the imagination of Google as an information monopolist increasingly spreading in public discourses. Mager concluded by arguing that it is thus central to think about the divergent politics pushed forward when choosing one method or another.

Alice Červinková and Tereza Stöckelová (Academy of Sciences Prague, Czech Republic) gave account of their long-term study in a department of sociology. They described the “inter/disciplinary hybrids” of social anthropology (SA) and gender studies (GS) that are partially connected to the “mother” discipline of sociology. Following Strathern (2007) they argued that disciplines are always interdisciplinary and identify three logics of this "hidden" interdisciplinarity. The logic of administration keeps SA and GS interlinked with sociology because of the lack of admissible senior professors who have to be formally "borrowed" from sociology; the logic of trajectory is embodied in researchers identities who often have degree in sociology and are not ready to completely disconnect from it (they are “boundary subjects”); and the logic of discipline allows for disciplinary ordering and cleansing, for keeping certain topics, epistemologies, ontologies and politics (especially in case of gender studies) out/on the margin of "proper" sociology, while guarding a partial control over them and mobilizing them as “sociology” when convenient.

During his presentation, Conor Douglas (University of York, UK and University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada) reframed the question “How to integrate qualitative social scientific results into the development of a new prescribing algorithm for the anticoagulation drug warfarin?” into “How and why does social scientific knowledge matter in a multidisciplinary research project on pharmacogenetics?” He argued that while the project’s social science component implied the collection of “bio-narratives” of patients to effectively develop a way for understanding how patients make sense of their medical treatment that these findings may not be able to be readily integrated into the overall project organization. It is a challenge for social scientists involved in multidisciplinary research to reflect on what they are effectively doing in the research process, and for investigators to critically examine their own social science knowledge production processes in the same way that we in STS are accustomed to examining conventional technoscientific knowledge production.

Javier Lezaun (University of Oxford, UK) introduced us to MS Balao, a large cargo ship that was partly designed as a platform for experiments in the democratization of work, under the auspices of the Work Research Institute in Oslo from 1968-1978. Lezaun showed how the ship was treated as socio-technical experiment in offshore shipboard democracy. Essential social and spatial requirements for democratic work were built into the technological conditions and physical arrangements of the ship. The experiment included “onboard” social scientists who in the process of conducting their research learned that hierarchical forms of organization and communication were also inherent in their research practice, and concluded that they had to open up their “expertise” to other contributors, hence performing a democratization of research as well.


Stefan Dormans (Virtual Knowledge Studio, Amsterdam, the Netherlands) presented a project on ICT-enabled collaborations, so called collaboratories, in the domain of social history. The various collaborations under study revolve around geographically dispersed groups of experts who aggregate and co-create specific datasets for international comparative research. In his own project, Dormans tries to combine the traditional ethnographic role of the observer with an active role as participant in a more design-oriented approach. Besides writing a critical analysis on the collaboratories, he also actively participates in their development. However, as discussed during the presentation, this double role challenges the ethnographers fear of ‘going native’ and, since the project started fairly recently, it is still difficult to see if this combination of distance and engagement is a feasible one.