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Science, Technology and Society Studies (STS) is an interdisciplinary research field concerned with how science and technology shapes and affects society and vice versa. The field has existed for roughly 50 years and emphasizes empirical studies of science and technology as practices. This means that knowledge and technology is seen as products of heterogeneous, situated, contingent and ‘messy’ processes in which social actors, materiality, other technologies, concepts and theories take part. The field of STS draws on extensive resources such as constructivism, post structuralism, process philosophy, social anthropology, critical theory, actor network theory, feminist studies, ethnography, work place studies, phenomenology and others.

At the centre, STS forms a methodological and conceptual resource for studying the role of technology and especially IT in a range of everyday and work life settings. STS helps us attend to the more or less visible and trivial aspects of the interaction between human actors and technologies. Our research often focuses on how humans and technologies forms - or attempts to form – functioning assemblages capable of action. The meticulous and tedious work of making something work is one of our central concerns.

The STS centre was established in 2000 and has over the years hosted a range of substantial national and international conferences, seminars and guests.

On behalf of the centre, the steering committee:

Researchers



Research areas

  • Healthcare practices and technologies
  • Surveillance practices and technologies
  • Organization, work and technology
  • Philosophy of technology
  • Governance, performance and technology
  • Social media and methods
  • Self-tracking and subjectivity
  • Empowerment and technology
  • Design practices and participation
  • Project management and innovation
  • Constructivism, democracy and normativity

Publications from our members

Andersen, L. B., Lauritsen, P., Bøge, A. R. & Danholt, P. (2016). Negotiating privacy in surveillant welfare relations. Paper presented at The 7th Biannual Surveillance and Society Conference, Barcelona, Spain.
Albrechtslund, A. (2016). Overvågning. Aarhus Universitetsforlag. Tænkepauser - viden til hverdagen Vol. 39
Andersen, L. B., Danholt, P. & Lauritsen, P. (2016). Participation & the power from within. Abstract from 4S/EASST Conference Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Bossen, C., Smith, R. C., Kanstrup, A. M., Huybrecths, L., Vines, J. & Bødker, K. (2016). Participatory design in an era of participation. Unspecified journal, 2, vii-ix.
Albrechtslund, A., Andersen, L. L. B. & Glud, L. N. (2016). Performing and Negotiating Family Tracking. Paper presented at The 7th Biannual Surveillance and Society Conference, Barcelona, Spain.
Bossen, C., Smith, R. C., Kanstrup, A. M., McDonnell, J., Teli, M. & Bødker, K. (Eds.) (2016). Proceedings of the 14th Participatory Design Conference Vol.I: Full papers . Association for Computing Machinery.
Bossen, C., Smith, R. C., Kanstrup, A. M., Huybrechts, L., Vines, J. & Bødker, K. (Eds.) (2016). Proceedings of the 14th Participatory Design Conference Vol. II: Short Papers, Interactive Exhibitions, Workshops. Association for Computing Machinery.
Velasco González, P. R. (2016). Sketching Bitcoin: Empirical Research of Digital Affordances. In Innovative Methods in Media and Communication Research (pp. 99-122). Palgrave Macmillan.
Schiølin, K. H. (2016). Teknologi. Aarhus Universitetsforlag. Tænkepauser - viden til hverdagen Vol. 42
Bossen, C. & Foss, M. (2016). The collaborative work of hospital porters: accountability, visibility and configurations of work. In Proceedings of the 19th ACM Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing, CSCW 2016: Proceedings of the 2016 Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work (pp. 965-979). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/2818048.2820002
Leimbach, T. & Bachlechner, D. (2015). Assessing Big Data: Results and experiences from Germany. In C. Scherz, T. Michalek, L. Hennen, J. Hahn & S. Seitz (Eds.), The next horizon of technology assessment: Proceedings from the PACITA 2015 Conference (pp. 243-248). http://pacita.strast.cz/files/Publikace/Proceedings-Berlin-v3.2-FINAL_3.pdf
Bossen, C. & Grönvall, E. (2015). Collaboration in-between The Care Hotel and Designing for Flexible Use: The Care Hotel and Designing for Flexible Use. In CSCW '15 : Proceedings of the 18th ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work & Social Computing (pp. 1289-1301). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/2675133.2675243
Olesen, F. & Markham, A. (2015). De uregerlige digitale rum: At bruge kvalitative metoder i internetforskning. In J. Ege Møller, S. S. E. Bengtsen & K. P. Munk (Eds.), Metodefetichisme : kvalitativ metode på afveje? (pp. 65-80). Aarhus Universitetsforlag.
Bøge, A. R. & Lauritsen, P. (2015). Looking for Trust: An ANT investigation of the history of the Danish DNA Database. Abstract from Workshop on trust, distrust and surveillance, Göteborg, Sweden.
Danholt, P. (2015). Modernist tools for a-modernist ontologies – yet another example of cutting-edge equivocation?. Paper presented at 2nd Nordic Science and Technology Studies (STS) Conference, København , Denmark.
Bossen, C. (2015). Techno-Anthropological Sensibilities in Health Informatics: Opportunities and challenges. In B. Lars, P. Bertelsen & C. Nøhr (Eds.), Techno-Anthropology in Health Informatics (pp. 168-179). IOS Press. https://doi.org/10.3233/978-1-61499-560-9-168
Danholt, P. (2015). The performativity of STS. Paper presented at 4S Annual Meeting, Denver, Colorado, United States.
Albrechtslund, A. & Albrechtslund, A.-M. B. (2015). The Touristic Practice of Performing Identity Online. In I. van der Ploeg & J. Pridmore (Eds.), Digitizing Identities: doing identity in a networked world (pp. 21-36). Routledge.
de Jong, E., Tkacz, N. & Velasco González, P. R. (2015). “You Will Live as Friends and Count as Enemies”: On Digital Cash and the Media of Payment. In Moneylab Reader (pp. 258-267). Institute of Network Cultures.

What Danish STS are doing