Eurograd message

Message posted on 11/07/2025

July 25 Community Call: “Big Science is in crisis. Can Small Science lend a hand?”

                On behalf of the SEEKCommons Project, which is funded by the U.S. 
National Science Foundation (NSF), we would like to invite you to our 
next community call:
Friday, July 25
6:00 p.m. CET / 12:00 p.m. EST / 9:00 a.m. PST
Via Zoom


In NSF SEEKCommons, we work in a distributed network of STS researchers, 
OS practitioners, and socio-environmental researchers to promote science 
and technology commons for participative socio-environmental research. 
Our call series offers an opportunity to discuss the possibilities of 
the commons as a governance framework, with speakers presenting on its 
challenges, benefits, lessons learned, and the uncharted possibilities 
for “open technologies.”

— - — - — - —
FRI 25 JUL 2025 - 6:00 PM (CET) / 12:00 PM (EST) / 9:00 AM (PST)
— - — - — - —
This month’s Community Call topic:
“Big Science is in crisis. Can Small Science lend a hand?” with 
Sebastián Ureta
Depending on massive funding (usually coming from the State), large 
teams of highly specialized researchers and substantial arrays of 
up-to-date equipment and infrastructures, the “Big Science” model became 
the leading way of conducting scientific research in the postwar period, 
especially in industrialized countries. Recent global developments, such 
as the massive termination of research grants in the U.S. or the 
redirection of public funding from basic research to defense in Europe, 
are causing its most radical upheaval to date. Given this scenario, this 
presentation will speculate whether “smaller” kinds of science could 
help keep critical research processes going, especially regarding urgent 
topics such as the socioenvironmental crisis. By smaller kinds of 
science, we refer to technoscientific practices that operate with tight 
budgets, involve few (if any) specialized researchers, and have strictly 
limited access to equipment and infrastructures. To avoid romanticizing 
smaller kinds of science, the presentation will explore these issues by 
focusing on citizen-led environmental research in Chile. Presenting its 
strengths and weaknesses, the aim is to examine whether the crisis in 
Big Science could be seen as an opportunity to explore more plural modes 
of science governance, maybe less spectacular but more attuned to carry 
out research in our fragmented and unequal worlds.

The series is open to public participation, and registration is 
required: https://bit.ly/3TehdH6
Complete details can be found in our July 25 Community Call Flyer: 
https://drive.google.com/file/d/19koyh9RO9Bkim1mQiM-nsMKNvrjebhBJ/view?usp=drive_link


For more info about the series, visit: 
https://seekcommons.org/community-calls.html
We hope you can join us!

Warm regards,
The NSF SEEKCommons Project

[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pdf which had a name of July Community Call - Sebastain Ureta CC SEEKCommons.pdf]
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