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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

Ostrowski, K. (2018). Empirical Prints - Verfremdung & Fabrications. STS Encounters , 10(1), 1-16.
Tkacz, N. & Velasco González, P. R. (2018). Experience Money. In Moneylab Reader 2 (1 ed.). Institute of Network Cultures.
Albrechtslund, A. & Bøge, A. R. (2018). Interpersonal Relations of Surveillance and Privacy in Families and Schools. 35. Abstract from Surveillance Studies Network Conference, Aarhus, Denmark.
Blond, L. & Schiølin, K. H. (2018). Lost in Translation: Getting to grips with multistable technology in an apparently stable world. In J. Aagaard, J. Kyrre Berg Friis, J. Sorenson, O. Tafdrup & C. Hasse (Eds.), Postphenomenological methodologies : New Ways in Mediating Techno-Human Relationships (pp. 151-167). Rowman & Littlefield International.
Danholt, P., Andersen, L. B. & Lauritsen, P. (2018). Ontological complexity and problem configuration. Abstract from DASTS 2018: Engaging the Data Moment, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Bossen, C., Dindler, C. & Iversen, O. S. (2018). Program Theory for Participatory Design. In Proceedings of the Participatory Design Conference, 2018, Genk Belgium Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3210604.3210638
Danholt, P. & Bøge, A. R. (2018). Surveillance as ‘insides’: exploring hand hygiene surveillance practices as enactment. Abstract from Surveillance beyond borders and boundaries, 8th Biennial Surveillance Studies Network Conference, Aarhus University, Aarhus, (Denmark), Aarhus , Denmark.
Danbjørg, D. B. & Olesen, F. (2018). Sygepleje og teknologi. Klinisk Sygepleje, 32(1), 73-78. https://doi.org/10.18261/issn.1903-2285-2018-01-07
Goodall, J. B. & Leimbach, T. (2018). Teaching and learning in a traveling discipline. In P. Svejvig & M. R. P. Hansen (Eds.), The human in the project (pp. 49-61). Dansk Projektledelse.
Olesen, F. (2018). Teknologiforståelsen former teknologianvendelsen: Praksisfilosofiske betragtninger over teknologiske modeller. In A. Dichmann Sorknæs, R. Kolbæk, T. U. Fredskild & U. Gars Jensen (Eds.), Sundhedsinformatik i sundhedsvæsnet (pp. 45-70). Gad.
Ostrowski, K. (2017). Cheese Topography. Paper presented at Third Nordic Science and Technology Studies Conference, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Andersen, L. B., Bøge, A. R. & Lauritsen, P. (2017). Child governance through circulating of data. Abstract from Third Nordic Science and Technology Studies Conference, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Zhang, Z., Sarcevic, A. & Bossen, C. (2017). Constructing common information spaces across distributed emergency medical teams. In CSCW 2017 - Proceedings of the 2017 ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing (pp. 934-947). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/2998181.2998328
Ostrowski, K. (2017). Empirical prints and contrapuntal inscriptions. Paper presented at EASST/4S Conference, Boston, Mass., Massachusetts, United States. http://4sonline.org/files/4S17_print_program0817.pdf
Ostrowski, K. (2017). Empirical Prints as dramatic images. Paper presented at EASST/4S Conference, Boston, Mass., Massachusetts, United States. http://4sonline.org/files/4S17_print_program0817.pdf
Schiølin, K. (2017). I bisværmen: teknologien i Ernst Jüngers sene fiktionsprosa . In A. Paulsen & A. E. Dam (Eds.), Soldat, arbejder, anark: Ernst Jüngers forfatterskab (pp. 329-358). Museum Tusculanum.
Rehder, M. M. & Ostrowski, K. (2017). MoRM and Future Memories: Collaboratively investigating a contrapuntal museum as a participatory research approach . In M. Poulsen (Ed.), The power of play: Voices from the Play Community (1. edition ed., pp. 144-155). Counterplay.
Smith, R. C., Bossen, C. & Kanstrup, A. M. (2017). Participatory Design in an Era of Participation. CoDesign: International Journal of CoCreation in Design and the Arts, 13(2), 65-69. https://doi.org/10.1080/15710882.2017.1310466
Smith, R. C., Bossen, C. & Kanstrup, A.-M. (Eds.) (2017). Participatory Design in an Era of Participation, Special Issue. CoDesign: International Journal of CoCreation in Design and the Arts Vol. 13 No. 2 http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15710882.2017.1310466
Leimbach, T. (2017). Path creation in the software industry: The case of the Software AG. IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, 39(4), 59-80. Article 8267986. https://doi.org/10.1109/MAHC.2018.1221042
Danholt, P. (2017). Re-configuring the post factual by means of STS. Abstract from Third Nordic Science and Technology Studies Conference, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Velasco González, P. R. (2017). Role Play Your Way to Budgetary Blockchain Bliss. In Artists Re:thinking the Blockchain (1 ed.). Liverpool University Press.
Bossen, C. (2017). Socio-technical Betwixtness: Design Rationales for Health Care IT. In M. S. Ackerman, S. Goggins, T. Herrmann, M. Prilla & C. Stary (Eds.), Designing Healthcare That Works: A Sociotechnical Approach (1st Edition ed., pp. 77-94). Academic Press.
Bøge, A. R., Albrechtslund, A. & Lauritsen, P. (2017). Surveillance and Communication. In P. Moy (Ed.), Oxford Bibliographies: Communication (Vol. 5, pp. 368-385). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/OBO/9780199756841-0193
Leimbach, T. & Goodall, J. B. (2017). The relation between project management education and newer streams in project management research. In M. R. P. Hansen & J. Pries-Heje (Eds.), The future of project management (pp. 65-74). Roskilde University.
Amsha, K. A., Grönvall, E., Saad-Sulonen, J. & Bossen, C. (2017). Understanding and supporting emergent and temporary collaboration across and beyond community and organizational boundaries. In C and T 2017 - 8th International Conference on Communities and Technologies, Conference Proceedings (pp. 331-333). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3083671.3083717
Bachlechner, D. & Leimbach, T. (2016). Big data challenges: impact, potential responses and research needs. In 2016 IEEE International Conference on Emerging Technologies and Innovative Business Practices for the Transformation of Societies, EmergiTech 2016 (pp. 257-264). Article 7737349 IEEE. https://doi.org/10.1109/EmergiTech.2016.7737349
Bossen, C., Danholt, P. & Ubbesen, M. B. (2016). Challenges of Data-driven Healthcare Management: New Skills and Work. Paper presented at The 19th ACM Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Social Computing, San Francisco, United States.

What Danish STS are doing