The 20th Annual Meeting will be held virtually from June 23-25, 2021. We will keep the single-track structure that we have always had in SDN (via a single Zoom room for the meeting).

As we did last year, we will be replicating the more social in-person meetings by asking attendees to join a special Slack workspace for the meeting.

What happens at the Annual Meeting?

The Annual Meeting provides a forum for discussing empirical research on important topics in the contemporary politics of science and technology. These meetings train young professionals, foster dialogue among scholars from across the globe, and build an improved knowledge base for public policy by highlighting issues of importance to national, regional, and global communities of scholars and practitioners..

Speakers are expected to submit papers before the meeting, and attendees are expected to read these before the sessions where they are discussed. There are no ‘streams’ in SDN, so that everyone can hear all presentations if they so wish.

In between the paper sessions are Plenary Panels, featuring active junior and senior members of the Network discussing pressing issues of science and democracy.

These academic sessions are usually complemented by more social periods, in which Network members and other registrants can catch up with each other and meet new colleagues. Opportunities are provided for graduate students to meet more senior scholars in mentoring sessions.

Do I have to be a member of the Network to attend?

You do not need to be a member of the Network to attend, but we assume that attendance means that you are interested in becoming a member. Membership is currently free, as membership is more about being a part of a thought collective at the cutting edge of STS rather than paying dues to an organization.

Day 1: Wednesday June 23rd

US PacificUS EasternLondonIndia
6:30am9:30amCommunity connection time in Zoom room
2:30pm7:00pm
6:45am9:45amMeeting Introduction
Sheila Jasanoff
2:45pm7:15pm
7:00am10:00amPaper Session 1 – Distributive Justice in Technology Governance
Chair: Ben Hurlbut, Arizona State University

The Epistemic Tensions of Nuclear Waste Siting in a Nuclear Landscape
Marissa Bell, Cornell

Understanding “fair returns” in European research: Configuring justice, scientific standing, and economic competition in the European space sector through the geo-return principle
Zinaida Vasilyeva and Sebastian Pfotenhauer, TU Munich

Containing Contention: Post-Disaster Strategies of International Nuclear Organizations to Maintain their Epistemic Dominance in Radiological Governance
Kyoko Sato, Stanford, and Christine Fassert, Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne

Human Beings as Nuclear Waste: Neoliberal Governance of Nuclear Medicine
Hugh Gusterson and Alison Macfarlane (UBC)
3:00pm7:30pm
7:30am10:30amPaper Session 1 – discussion3:30pm8:00pm
8:30am11:30amSDN Zoom room open and small group/grad student meetings4:30pm9:00pm
9:30am12:30pmBREAK5:30pm10:00pm
10:30am1:30pmPlenary Panel A – STS in the Wild
Chair: Rob Hagendijk, University of Amsterdam

Makoto Takahashi, Munich Center for Technology in Society
Hilton Simmet, Harvard Kennedy School
Kasper Schiølin, Aarhus University
Margo Boenig-Liptsin, UC Berkeley
Vidya Subramanian, Indian Institute of Technology Bombay
6:30pm11:00pm
11:30am2:30pmPlenary Panel A Discussion7:30pm12:00am*
12:00pm3:00pmBREAK8:00pm12:30am*
1:00pm4:00pmPaper Session 2 – The Politics of Environmental Democracy
Chair: Ulrike Felt, Univeristy of Vienna

Democracy in a downpour: civic epistemologies as expectations of democracy in the governance of Mexico’s storms
Anna Bridel, LSE

Contested socio-environmental imaginaries of water and rivers in times of total hydro-extractivism in Costa Rica
Francesc Rodriguez, Brandenburg University of Technology

Climate change (un)imaginaries: The depoliticising gaze of computer vision
Warren Pearce, Sheffield

Ending History: Empiricism, Earth System Science and Empire
Stefan Schäfer, IASS Potsdam
9:00pm1:30am*
1:30pm4:30pmPaper Session 2 – Discussion9:30pm2:00am*
2:30pm5:30pmSDN Zoom Room Open for casual discussion10:30pm3:00am*
3:15pm6:15pmEND Day 111:15pm3:45am*

Day 2: Thursday June 24th

US PacificUS EasternLondonIndia
6:30am9:30amPlenary Panel B: Stress Tests for Democracy: Covid-19 and Comparative Social Compacts
Chair: Sheila Jasanoff, Harvard Kennedy School

Brice Laurent, CSI-Mines ParisTech (Constitutionalism)
Sujatha Raman, Australia National University (Citizenship)
Ian McGonigle, Nanyang Technological University (Trust)
Ulrike Felt, University of Vienna (Public Engagement)
Silke Beck, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research – UFZ (Expertise)
Stephen Hilgartner, Cornell University (Nationalism)
2:30pm7:00pm
7:30am10:30amPaper Session 3 – Knowing and Being: Knowledge Collectives and Political Subjects (Graduate Panel)
Chair: Shobita Parthasarathy, University of Michigan

Constituting Risk: Pesticides, Regulatory Science and Farmers in Western Uttar Pradesh
Abhigya, IIT Delhi

The Science of Climate Change: A Source of National-Level Variation Rather than Commonality
Conrad George, Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona

The democratization of expert authority
Kinley Gillette, University of British Columbia

Barriers and limitations public policy formulation through citizen e-Participation: A study of Smart City Campaign over MyGov platform in India
Sharique Manazir, Jawaharlal Nehru University

From neighborhood planning to urban innovation? Understanding shifts in philanthropic foundations engagement in urban development through a prominent foundation network, Living Cities
Jeeson Oh, Ohio State

The (un)making of electoral transparency through technology: the Kenyan 2017 presidential controversy
Cecilia Passanti, Université de Paris
3:30pm8:00pm
8:00am11:00amPaper Session 3 – discussion4:00pm8:30pm
9:00am12:00pmBREAK5:00pm9:30pm
9:15am12:15pmPlenary Panel B Cont.
Re-convening and discussion
5:15pm9:45pm
10:00am1:00pmBREAK6:00pm10:30pm
12:30pm3:30pmPaper Session – 4 Constituting Bioeconomic Subjects
Chair: Sebastian Pfotenhauer, Technical University Munich

Collaging public health: Medical research collections and the formation of ‘bioconstitutional citizenship’
Erik Aarden, Klagenfurth

Imagining informedness, authorizing consent: worldmaking in ACLU opposition to migrant DNA testing
Elizabeth Dietz, ASU

Economic common sense: Causality and co-production in applied economics
Pariroo Rattan, Harvard

The rise of narratives: On the role of narratives as patterns of understanding in socio-technical imaginaries
Bernhard Fischer-Appelt and Rafael Dernbach, Harvard WCFIA
8:30pm1:00am*
1:00pm4:00pmPaper Session 4 – discussion9:00pm1:30am*
2:00pm5:00pmSDN Zoom room open for discussions10:00pm2:30am*
3:00pm6:00pmEND Day 211:00pm3:30am*

Day 3: Friday June 25th

US PacificUS EasternLondonIndia
6:30am9:30amPaper Session 5 – Accounting and Accountable Experts
Chair: Stephen Hilgartner, Cornell

Comprehensive Science Advisory Groups: familiarity and distinctiveness in producing and contesting nanotechnology policy
Aixa Aleman-Diaz, Copenhagen Business School

Regulatory Science and Precautionary Science: From Comitology of Experts to Expert Communities for the Supervision and Regulation of Nano-Technologies in Argentina
Mauricio Berger, CONICET, UNCordoba, Argentina

Disposition: The Army Corps of Engineers and the Unmaking of the Mississippi River
Roopali Phadke, Macalester

Public Accountability for Expert Advisors: Exploring the Concept with a Case Study on Glyphosate
Vesco Peskalev, Brunel
2:30pm7:00pm
7:00am10:00amPaper Session 5 – Discussion3:00pm7:30pm
8:00am11:00amBREAK4:00pm8:30pm
8:15am11:15amSTS Pedagogy Roundtable: Close Encounters with Another Kind
Chair: Sam Weiss Evans, Harvard

Jacob Moses, Johns Hopkins Medicine
Karen Huang, Georgetown
Matthew Sample, Leibniz University Hannover
Kyoko Sato, Stanford
4:15pm8:45pm
9:15am12:15pmBREAK5:15pm9:45pm
10:30am1:30pmPaper Session 6 – Citizens of Technological Futures
Chair: Sheila Jasanoff, Harvard

Ordering the 5G Future: Deference and Sovereignty in City of Portland v. United States
Nicole Bassoff, HKS

Testing Energy Futures and Citizenship in a Community Micro-Grid
Sarah Delvaux, Liège

Green New Deals: What shapes Green and Deal?
Les Levidow, Open University

Tech’s “We” Problem
Gali Racabi, HLS
6:30pm11:00pm
11:00am2:00pmPaper Session 6 – Discussion7:00pm11:30pm
12:00pm3:00pmMeeting wrap-up; plans for next year8:00pm12:30am*
12:45pm3:45pmSDN Zoom room open for discussion and goodbyes8:45pm1:15am*
1:30pm4:30pmEND Day 39:30pm2:00am*