Locating Excellence and Enacting Locality [Book Review]

Science, Technology, and Human Values 37 (2):241-263 (2012)
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Abstract

This article notes that research policy and early laboratory studies resonate in foregrounding the laboratory as an important place and agent in producing valued research output but tend to gloss over the complex processes by which laboratories are built and sustained over time as well as the significance of non-Western histories. Drawing on multisited ethnography in laboratories located in the geopolitical East of Europe, it examines the articulations and tensions between performing laboratories as locales and as locations of scientific excellence across a range of heretofore underexamined online and offline sites, including group seminars and institutional Web pages. By drawing attention to enterprising modes of performing achievement and lab organization, the article shows how the laboratory is also a policy actor and reproduces Westward-oriented knowledge geographies. Pointing to care as a mode of ordering, it further explores different forms of material and affective labor that are obfuscated in such performances but build and sustain the lab as local–global assemblage. The article concludes by discussing the policy implications of making this labor visible.

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Dagmar M. Meyer
Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg (Alumnus)

Citations of this work

Science Policy and STS from Other Epistemic Places. [REVIEW]Tereza Stöckelová & Lisa Garforth - 2012 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 37 (2):226-240.

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