Anticipation, Temporal Structures and Practices
Whether it is the seemingly accelerating temporalities of academic life, the futures imagined in making new technologies, or the way temporalities matter when addressing environmental challenges, theorizing temporality is an axis that connects department projects from very different domains. Indeed, projection, speculation, promise or anticipation have become key practices performed both in science but also in science policy, and are essential when it comes to making choices in the now. How we understand time, and how controlling time can become a locus of power, are important elements in our reflections on science, technology and society.
People
Ruth Falkenberg | Ulrike Felt | Robin Rae | Pouya Sepehr |
Projects
- Biobanking and BioMolecular Resources Research Infrastructure Austria #2 (BBMRI.at#2) — Societal Engagement: Responsible Research and Innovation in Biobanking;
- FutureArctic: A glimpse into the Arctic future: equipping a unique natural experiment for next-generation ecosystem research;
- Smart4Health: Citizen-centred EU-EHR exchange for personalised health;
- Valuing, Being, Knowing. Understanding the entanglements of valuation practices and subjectification processes in life science research.