Rhetoric CFPs & TOCs

Rhetoric CFPs & TOCs
Photo: Kristoffer Trolle (creative commons)

Thursday, April 6, 2017

Science, Technology, & Human Values- Volume: 42, Number: 3 (May 2017)

Table of Contents Alert

Editorial

Thank You, ST&HV Reviewers 2013–2016!
Edward J. Hackett, Katie Vann, David Ribes

Articles

How Social Scientists Make Causal Claims in Court
Federico BrandmayrAuthor Biography
Federico Brandmayr is a doctoral candidate in sociology and teaching fellow at the Université Paris–Sorbonne, Paris, France. His dissertation investigates the use of social scientific knowledge beyond the academic sphere, focusing on the causes, forms, and consequences of epistemological positions adopted by social scientists in court.

Ethics Policies and Ethics Work in Cross-national Genetic Research and Data Sharing
Klaus Hoeyer, Aaro Tupasela, Malene Bøgehus RasmussenAuthor Biographies
Klaus Hoeyer is a professor of medical science and technology studies and head of the graduate program in medicine, culture, and society at the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen. He studies data politics, exchange systems for human bodily material, and ethics as a form of regulation and is the author of Exchanging Human Bodily Material: Rethinking Bodies and Markets (Springer 2013).

Aaro Tupasela is an associate professor of ethical, legal, and social aspects of biobanking at the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, and the Faculty of Law, University of Copenhagen. His research has focused on the relationship between rare disease research and national identity formation as well as issues of biobank engagement and sustainability. Most recently, his interests have examined how populations are branded and objectified through biobanking and genetic research.

Malene Bøgehus Rasmussen is a medical doctor working within medical genetics since 2010. Her scientific interests are on structural variations in the human genome and their contribution to health and disease, particularly brain-related disorders. She is currently finishing a PhD on balanced chromosomal rearrangements at the Department of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen.

Shi (勢), STS, and Theory
Wen-Yuan LinAuthor Biography
Wen-Yuan Lin is a professor at the National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan. He uses STS material semiotic approaches to explore the emerging alternative knowledge spaces and politics enacted in technological and medical practices. He is the author of 看不見的行動能力:從行動者網絡到位移理論 (Invisible Agency: A Displacement Theory for Subalterns; Institute of Sociology Academia Sinica Press, 2014). His website is wylin.gec.nthu.edu.tw.

Rejuvenating Design
Alexander Peine, Vivette van Cooten, , , Louis NevenAuthor Biographies
Alexander Peine holds a tenured position as assistant professor of Science, Technology and Innovation Studies at Utrecht University. His research explores sociotechnical change at the intersection of ICT innovation, the built environment and ageing, covering diverse themes such as Smart Homes, eBikes, robots and nanotechology. In terms of theory, he is particularly interested in bridging STS and social gerontology to explore the “socio-material constitution of later life”.

Vivette van Cooten studied Science and Innovation Management at Utrecht University. She is currently a Lecturer at the School of Health at Avans University of Applied Sciences and project leader of the GET-Lab (Health and Technology laboratory).

Louis Neven is research professor at Avans University of Applied Sciences and leads the Active Ageing research group. He has a longstanding interest in the critical analysis of the design and use of technologies for older people.

Rethinking Value in the Bio-economy
Kean BirchAuthor Biography
Kean Birch is an associate professor in the Business and Society Program and member of the Science and Technology Studies Graduate Program at York University, Canada. His recent books include We Have Never Been Neoliberal (2015, Zero Books); The Handbook of Neoliberalism (2016, Routledge—coedited with Simon Springer and Julie MacLeavy); Innovation, Regional Development and the Life Sciences: Beyond Clusters (2016, Routledge); and Business and Society: A Critical Introduction (forthcoming, Zed Books—coauthored with Mark Peacock, Richard Wellen, Caroline Shenaz Hossein, Sonya Scott, and Alberto Salazar). He is currently working on a book called A Research Agenda for Neoliberalism for Edward Elgar.

Has the Internet Reduced Friendship? Scientific Relationships in Ghana, Kenya, and India, 1994-2010
Wesley Shrum, Antony Palackal, Dan-Bright S. Dzorgbo, Paul Mbatia, Mark Schafer, Paige Miller, Heather RackinAuthor Biographies
Wesley Shrum is professor of Sociology at Louisiana State University and Program Officer for the Society for Social Studies of Science. His primary interests are social networks and information technology in low income countries and video ethnography.

Antony Palackal is professor of Sociology at the Loyola College of Social Science in Trivandrum, India.

Dan-Bright S. Dzorgbo is professor of Sociology at the University of Ghana, Legon.

Paul Mbatia is Deputy Vice Chancellor at Multimedia University in Nairobi, Kenya.

Mark Schafer is professor of Sociology and Agricultural Economics at Louisiana State University.

Paige Miller is associate professor of Sociology at the University of Wisconsin, River Falls.

Heather Rackin is assistant professor of Sociology at Louisiana State University.

Which Fish? Knowledge, Articulation, and Legitimization in Claims about Endangered and Culturally Significant Animals
Nicholas BuchananAuthor Biography
Nicholas Buchanan is visiting assistant professor in the Program in History of Science, Technology, and Medicine at the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities. He received his PhD from the Program in Science, Technology, and Society at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and his BA in Geography from University of California, Berkeley.

No comments:

Post a Comment