Abstract: In a previous article appeared in this journal, I1 introduced Bruno Latour’s cartography of controversies and I discussed half of it, namely how to observe techno-scientific controversies. In this article I will concentrate on the remaining half: how to represent the complexity of social debates in a legible form. In my previous paper, we learnt how to explore the richness of collective existence through Actor-Network Theory. In this one, I will discuss how to render such complexity through an original visualization device: the controversy-website. Capitalizing on the potential of digital technologies, the controversy-website has been developed as a multilayered toolkit to trace and aggregate information on public debates
Governments around the world are increasingly utilising online platforms and social media to engage ...
This article assesses the usefulness for social media research of controversy analysis, an approach ...
It is increasingly important for academic researchers to demonstrate the impact of their work, not o...
In a previous article appeared in this journal, I introduced Bruno Latour's cartography of controver...
In a previous article appeared in this journal, I introduced Bruno Latour’s cartography of controve...
"Controversy Mapping" shows how we can use social research to bring controversies back to the surfac...
This is an article in the journal Design Issues which discusses controversy mapping, a method derive...
The cartography of controversies is a set of techniques to explore and visualize issues. It was deve...
Despite the democratic ambitions underlying the practice of controversy mapping, external actors sel...
This paper takes stock of recent efforts to implement controversy analysis as a digital method, in t...
This article takes stock of recent efforts to implement controversy analysis as a digital method in ...
The cartography of controversies is a set of techniques to explore and visualize issues. It was deve...
This article assesses the usefulness for social media research of controversy analysis, an approach ...
This article presents the contribution of a communicational perspective to the study of controversie...
The opening of enormous databases and the possibility offered by new tools to access the heterogen...
Governments around the world are increasingly utilising online platforms and social media to engage ...
This article assesses the usefulness for social media research of controversy analysis, an approach ...
It is increasingly important for academic researchers to demonstrate the impact of their work, not o...
In a previous article appeared in this journal, I introduced Bruno Latour's cartography of controver...
In a previous article appeared in this journal, I introduced Bruno Latour’s cartography of controve...
"Controversy Mapping" shows how we can use social research to bring controversies back to the surfac...
This is an article in the journal Design Issues which discusses controversy mapping, a method derive...
The cartography of controversies is a set of techniques to explore and visualize issues. It was deve...
Despite the democratic ambitions underlying the practice of controversy mapping, external actors sel...
This paper takes stock of recent efforts to implement controversy analysis as a digital method, in t...
This article takes stock of recent efforts to implement controversy analysis as a digital method in ...
The cartography of controversies is a set of techniques to explore and visualize issues. It was deve...
This article assesses the usefulness for social media research of controversy analysis, an approach ...
This article presents the contribution of a communicational perspective to the study of controversie...
The opening of enormous databases and the possibility offered by new tools to access the heterogen...
Governments around the world are increasingly utilising online platforms and social media to engage ...
This article assesses the usefulness for social media research of controversy analysis, an approach ...
It is increasingly important for academic researchers to demonstrate the impact of their work, not o...