[Sci-tech-public] Reminder: Sheila Jasanoff's April 6th STS Colloquium at MIT

Debbie Meinbresse meinbres at MIT.EDU
Fri Apr 3 14:12:02 EDT 2009


Please join us at MIT on Monday, April 6th:

STS Colloquium

Future Imperfect:  Sociotechnical Imaginaries and Cultures of Public Policy

Sheila Jasanoff
John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University

4:00 pm, MIT, E51-095*

Abstract
For more than half a century, governments have channeled a fraction 
of their public spending toward the development of science and 
technology for peaceful purposes.  Underlying those expenditures is a 
faith in innovation and its capacity to advance national 
interests.  The discrepant cross-national uptake and trajectories of 
"the same" technologies suggests, however, that the links between 
technology's potential and conceptions of the public good differ 
among political cultures.  In this talk, I will develop the idea of 
national sociotechnical imaginaries and show how they operate to 
create different logics of possibility for national 
investments.  Using examples from the US, Europe, and beyond, I will 
show how imaginations are conditioned by different founding notions 
of state-society relations, the publics to be served, and the futures 
that are considered desirable.  I will reflect on US imaginaries as 
played out in President Obama's early policy pronouncements.

Bio
Sheila Jasanoff is Pforzheimer Professor of Science and Technology 
Studies at the Harvard Kennedy School. She has held academic 
positions at Cornell, Yale, Cambridge, Oxford, and Kyoto. At Cornell, 
she founded and chaired the Department of Science and Technology 
Studies. She has been Karl Deutsch Guest Professor at the Science 
Center Berlin and Fellow at the Berlin Institute for Advanced 
Study.  She has authored more than 100 publications on the role of 
science and technology in the law, politics, and public policy of 
modern democracies, with particular focus on the regulation of 
biotechnology and the environment in the US, Europe, and India. Her 
books include Controlling Chemicals (1985), The Fifth Branch (1990), 
Science at the Bar (1995), and Designs on Nature (2005). Jasanoff has 
served on the Board of Directors of the American Association for the 
Advancement of Science and as President of the Society for Social 
Studies of Science.  She holds AB, JD, and PhD degrees from Harvard, 
an honorary doctorate from the University of Twente, and an 
Ehrenkreuz from the Government of Austria.


*To view this building's location on the MIT campus: 
http://whereis.mit.edu/map-jpg?zoom=level2&centerx=712138&centery=496004&oldzoom=level3&map.x=320&map.y=192

Debbie Meinbresse
STS Program, MIT
617-452-2390
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://mailman.mit.edu/pipermail/sci-tech-public/attachments/20090403/df981431/attachment.htm


More information about the Sci-tech-public mailing list