Department of Science and Technology Studies

Science, technology and innovation shape life in modern societies in countless ways. Some of these are perceived as positive, others are deeply controversial. In turn, policy, corporations, the media and other societal actors influence how knowledge and technologies are produced. Science and technology studies analyzes these interactions, and aims to foster critical and reflexive debates on the relations of science, technology and society.



 New Publications

Lieverouw E, Felt U. Governing Citzen-Patients: The Digital Infrastructuring of Health and Care in Europe. In Marent B, editor, De Gruyter Handbook of Digital Health and Society. De Gruyter. 2026 doi: 10.4337/9781800886629.00011

Davies S. Our Writing Could Be Otherwise: Reflections on Teaching Citational Politics as an Aspect of Academic Writing. KULA: Knowledge Creation, Dissemination, and Preservation Studies . 2026 Jan 9. doi: 10.18357/kula.313

Kirchhelle C, Portillo MYA, Davis MDM, Doron A, Dreser A, Fortané N et al. (Un)intended consequences: a social sciences stocktake of a decade of Global Action Plan-inspired antimicrobial governance. The Lancet Microbe. 2026 Jan. doi: 10.1016/j.lanmic.2025.101315

Mayer K, Skupien S, Knaus J. The Commons Approach: A Proposal for a Digital Humanist Agenda to (Re)Open Artificial Intelligence. In Digital Humanism. Springer. 2026 doi: 10.1007/978-3-032-11108-1_28

Gregory K, Schikowitz A, Goldberg E, Davies S. What Emotions Bring to Managing, Caring for, and Sharing Qualitative Data. Information Research. 2026;31(1):247-267. doi: 10.47989/ir31154039

Showing entries 1 - 5 out of 259