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[ecrea] CFP: Governing Technology: Material Politics and Hybrid Agencies (deadline is March 22, 2013)
Thu Feb 14 12:12:24 GMT 2013
Governing Technology: Material Politics and Hybrid Agencies
*Thursday, May 9 and Friday, May 10, 2013
**Stanford Humanities Center
*
*_http://governing.morganya.org_**
*
This conference aims to bring together two communities of scholars:
those examining the ways that states and other institutions have sought
to govern technologies, and those examining the ways that technologies
have influenced the practice and form of governing. In the process, we
will revisit the concept of governance through the lens of /material
politics/.
As some technologies promise the world and others threaten to overrun
it, scholars in the humanities and social sciences have turned a
critical eye to the agentive power and material effects of technology,
as well as the responses that this power invokes. Research on
technology's entanglements with states, transnational organizations, and
other powerful institutions has often taken its cues from science and
technology studies. In particular, pioneering work in STS on
materiality, on governmentality, and on hybrid and nonhuman agency has
become more and more a part of mainstream work in history, geography,
anthropology, communication, literary studies, sociology, and beyond.
Scholars from across these fields have, in turn, developed new
frameworks of analysis that go beyond classic conceptions of
governmentality and materiality to incorporate their own disciplinary
strengths.
*Cornell professor Steve Jackson*
<_https://sites.google.com/site/stanfordstsgrad/conference/keynote_>
will discuss the interplay between governance and technology in his
*keynote lecture*
<_https://sites.google.com/site/stanfordstsgrad/conference/keynote_> .
The conference will wrap up with a roundtable discussion on building the
STS community in the Bay Area and beyond, featuring STS professors from
Stanford and several nearby Universities of California.
We invite papers that consider (or critique) the relevance of /material
politics/ in understanding the relationship between governance and
technology: how states and other institutions respond to challenges
imposed by new and emerging technological developments and how
technologies, understood broadly, become part of governing.
Papers from any discipline or institution are encouraged. Possible
topics include, but are not limited to:
* Natural resource management and extraction
* The politics of environmental regulation and tourism
* National or transnational policies on innovation and intellectual
property
* The regulation and development of biotechnology
* The agency and role of non-governmental organizations
* Governing dangerous materials
* The politics of agricultural technologies
* Medical innovation and regulation
* The /un/governability of certain technologies
* The politics of technology in public health or urban planning
* Historical accounts of technological governance or agency
* Theoretical discussions or critiques of material agencies
* Theoretical discussions of governance through the lens of material
politics
Please submit the following to *_governing.technology@morganya.org_*:
* *A submission abstract* of no more than 250 words
* *A brief biography* of no more than 50 words to be included in the
conference program
The deadline for submissions is *March 22, 2013*. Notifications will be
sent and the schedule posted by April 12, 2013.
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