Articles
Showing entries 1 - 10 out of 172
Davies, S., & Avkiran, A. S. (2025). Expertise in/of co-Creation: The Care Work of Citizen Participation. Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society. Advance online publication. https://journals-sagepub-com.uaccess.univie.ac.at/doi/10.1177/02704676251353100
Felt, U. (2025). Residues that matter: Why innovation societies need to rethink their response-ability. Proceedings of the Paris Institute for Advanced Study, 21. https://paris.pias.science/article/residues-that-matter-why-innovation-societies-need-to-rethink-their-response-ability
Horn, C., & Felt, U. (2025). Collateral transitions. Reassembling societies, data centres and the twin transition. Environmental Science and Policy, 170, Article 104122. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2025.104122
Horn, C., & Felt, U. (2025). On the Environmental Fragilities of Digital Solutionism. Articulating “Digital” and “Green” in the EU’s “Twin Transition”. Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning. https://doi.org/10.1080/1523908X.2025.2515225
Fian, L., Felt, U., Hofmann, T., White, M., & Pahl, S. (2025). Microplastics in food and drink: Predictors of public risk perceptions and support for plastic-reducing policies based on a climate change framework. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 103(102583). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvp.2025.102583
Horn, C., & Felt, U. (2025). When Digital Health Encounters Regulation: The Approval Process for Prescription Apps in Germany and its Ontological Politics . Science & Technology Studies.
Schikowitz, A. (2025). Self-Managed Housing in Vienna: Managing Ambivalences Between Invitability and Resistance. Social Inclusion, 13, Article 7993. https://doi.org/10.17645/si.7993
Schikowitz, A., Dessewffy, E., Davies, S., Pham, B.-C., Gregory, K., Goldberg, E., Avkiran, A. S., & Mora-Gámez, F. (2025). Writing Choreographies: (STS) Knowledge Production in Post- digital Academia. Tecnoscienza: Italian Journal of Science & Technology Studies, 1.
Pham, B.-C., & Davies, S. (2025). What problems is the AI act solving? Technological solutionism, fundamental rights, and trustworthiness in European AI policy. Critical Policy Studies, 19(2), 318-336. https://doi.org/10.1080/19460171.2024.2373786