Article ID: CBB212118007

Caring for Nanotechnology? Being an Integrated Social Scientist (2015)

unapi

One of the most significant shifts in science policy of the past three decades is a concern with extending scientific practice to include a role for ‘society’. Recently, this has led to legislative calls for the integration of the social sciences and humanities in publicly funded research and development initiatives. In nanotechnology – integration’s primary field site – this policy has institutionalized the practice of hiring social scientists in technical facilities. Increasingly mainstream, the workings and results of this integration mechanism remain understudied. In this article, I build upon my three-year experience as the in-house social scientist at the Cornell NanoScale Facility and the United States’ National Nanotechnology Infrastructure Network to engage empirically and conceptually with this mode of governance in nanotechnology. From the vantage point of the integrated social scientist, I argue that in its current enactment, integration emerges as a particular kind of care work, with social scientists being fashioned as the main caretakers. Examining integration as a type of care practice and as a ‘matter of care’ allows me to highlight the often invisible, existential, epistemic, and affective costs of care as governance. Illuminating a framework where social scientists are called upon to observe but not disturb, to reify boundaries rather than blur them, this article serves as a word of caution against integration as a novel mode of governance that seemingly privileges situatedness, care, and entanglement, moving us toward an analytically skeptical (but not dismissive) perspective on integration.

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https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB212118007/

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Authors & Contributors
Andréolle, Donna Spalding
Austin, Stephanie
Bijsterveld, Karin
Choi, Hyungsub
Clough, Sharyn
Creager, Angela N. H.
Journals
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
American Quarterly
Canadian Bulletin of Medical History/Bulletin Canadienne d'Histoire de la Medecine
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
Lover: Tijdschrift over feminisme, cultuur en wetenschap
Spontaneous Generations
Publishers
University of Chicago Press
West Virginia University
University of California, Santa Cruz
Duke University Press
Rowman & Littlefield
York University (Canada)
Concepts
Feminism
Feminist analysis
Science and gender
Women in science
Biology
Science studies, theoretical works
People
Wilson, Edward Osborne
Fischer-Dückelmann, Anna
Gudger, Eugene Willis
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
20th century, late
21st century
20th century, early
Places
United States
Europe
Germany
North America
England
Institutions
Cornell University
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