Recent publications 1

Articles published in the EASST Review & Science & Technology Studies

The EASST Review is a quarterly open access publication that has followed developments in our field for more than 30 years.
EASST Review (ISSN 1384-5160) is published biannually and distributed digitally to all EASST members.

Sample

Creating an Irish Science, Technology, and Society (STS) Community: an Unconference?

Kalpana Shankar

Capitalization and the Startup Economy: Critical Perspectives on Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Venture Capitalism

Anna Lytvynova

Finnish Society for Science and Technology Studies 2024 Symposium ‘How to make a scientific contribution

Elis Jones

Leakage Revisited – Report from the inaugural conference of stsing

Markus Hoffmann, Michaela Büsse, Ozan Altinok, Poonam Kamath & Aurora A. Sauter

Report from Space Science in Context 2023: Our efforts to bring STS approaches to Outer Space to a wider community

Eleanor S Armstrong and Divya M Persaud

Presenting the winners of EASST’s second creative writing competition

Michela Cozza, Nina Klimburg-Witjes and Sally Wyatt

From Pretoria to Amsterdam: Discussing Decolonial Practices at EASST-4S?

Lara Dal Molin

News from the Council: The future of the EASST-4S joint conference

Maja Horst and Michela Cozza (President and Secretary of EASST Council)

Editorial

EASST Review Editorial Team

What Does the University Feel Like?

Lisette Jong, Donovan Shaefer, Ulrike Scholtes and Esha Shah 

Affective Ties of Academia: Belonging, Learning, and Community at EASST-4S

Benjamin Leon Hoffmann

Science & Technology Studies is an international peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the advancement of scholarly studies of science and technology as socio-material phenomena, including their historical and contemporary production and their associated forms of knowledge, expertise, social organization and controversy.

STS Journal: Featured article

Ethical Plateaus in Danish Child Protection Services: The Rise and Demise of Algorithmic Models

by Helene Friis Ratner and Ida Schrøder.

This paper analyses how controversies shape an emerging field of AI in Danish child protection services. In a context of high controversiality, we examine how algorithmic systems evolve in conjunction with changing ethical stakes. Empirically, we report a study comprising all Danish attempts (…) read more

EASST Review: Featured article

Friction Takes Center Stage in Science Communication: Theater Dialogues of Dissent

by Willemine Willems, Keje Boersma, Jaron Harambam, Tessa Roedema, Esther de Weger

It is early 2024 when we enter the second phase of our project Climate Research in Dialogue. The rationale for the project is straightforward. The climate crisis has become a particularly politicized issue in The Netherlands, as it has in other places; with strong disagreement between citizens and between political parties (…) Read more