In this interview, Karin Knorr Cetina evokes the first Annual Meeting of the Society for Social Studies of Science at Cornell University in 1976 as a foundational moment for science and technology studies (STS). This conference consolidated a new approach to the study of science based on the anthropological observation of scientists at work in the laboratory. Knorr Cetina argues that, despite geographically cementing in the United States, this approach originated mainly through the work of European scholars. The years that followed the Cornell meeting were marked by intense debates between the defenders of this anthropological approach and other scholars more focused on ideas than on scientific practice. Knorr Cetina describes these debates...
How to survive in this forest? How to keep it alive? Latour poses these questions in relation to the...
An informal community has regularly organized annual conferences in Europe since 2007, on the conne...
This interview is part of a series of interviews on open science and digital scholarship conducted i...
Mike Mulkay takes Eugénia Rodrigues through a journey that revisits his involvement in the Sociology...
Science and Technology Studies (STS) projects often aim at understanding social problems and epistem...
In this interview, Arie Rip talks to Jane Calvert about his life in STS and the history and future o...
In a wide-ranging interview, Donald MacKenzie and Pablo Schyfter discuss the former’s entry into sci...
Why would anyone still want to go to the laboratory in 2018? In this interview, Michael Lynch answer...
In the Conclusion to the Gulbenkian Foundation Report we read: “What needs to be called for is less ...
Research in Science and Technology Studies (STS) tends to presume that intellectual and political ra...
Science and Technology. We are accustomed to accept this phrase as a single integrated concept, thou...
The controversy over Thomas Kuhn’s astonishingly successful The Structure of Scientific Revolutions ...
Science and technology studies (STS) is an important and often controversial interdisciplinary field...
Talking STS is a collection of interviews and accompanying reflections on the origins, the present a...
How can we understand the intensifying interactions of science and society? It is the interdisciplin...
How to survive in this forest? How to keep it alive? Latour poses these questions in relation to the...
An informal community has regularly organized annual conferences in Europe since 2007, on the conne...
This interview is part of a series of interviews on open science and digital scholarship conducted i...
Mike Mulkay takes Eugénia Rodrigues through a journey that revisits his involvement in the Sociology...
Science and Technology Studies (STS) projects often aim at understanding social problems and epistem...
In this interview, Arie Rip talks to Jane Calvert about his life in STS and the history and future o...
In a wide-ranging interview, Donald MacKenzie and Pablo Schyfter discuss the former’s entry into sci...
Why would anyone still want to go to the laboratory in 2018? In this interview, Michael Lynch answer...
In the Conclusion to the Gulbenkian Foundation Report we read: “What needs to be called for is less ...
Research in Science and Technology Studies (STS) tends to presume that intellectual and political ra...
Science and Technology. We are accustomed to accept this phrase as a single integrated concept, thou...
The controversy over Thomas Kuhn’s astonishingly successful The Structure of Scientific Revolutions ...
Science and technology studies (STS) is an important and often controversial interdisciplinary field...
Talking STS is a collection of interviews and accompanying reflections on the origins, the present a...
How can we understand the intensifying interactions of science and society? It is the interdisciplin...
How to survive in this forest? How to keep it alive? Latour poses these questions in relation to the...
An informal community has regularly organized annual conferences in Europe since 2007, on the conne...
This interview is part of a series of interviews on open science and digital scholarship conducted i...