Editorial: Care in STS

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5324/njsts.v9i1.4000

Abstract

During the last 10 years the Science and Technology Studies (STS) community has witnessed a flourishing, intense and multifaceted engagement around “care”. While care had been addressed already before in Joanna Latimer’s The conduct of care: Understanding nursing practice (Latimer, 2000) , and in Jeanette Pols’ Good care: Enacting a complex ideal in long term-psychiatry (Pols, 2004), care seemed to be on everybody’s lips around 2010. Around the same time, the edited volume Care in practice: On tinkering in clinics, homes and farms (Mol et al., 2010) and the article Matters of care in technoscience: Assembling neglected things (Puig de la Bellacasa, 2011) were published. With akin, yet partly diverging, agendas and concerns, these two key publications drastically increased the amount of research that identify with something like an area of “care studies” in STS. This can also be seen in the publication of special issues devoted to care during the last years, notably the much-cited 2015 issue in Social Studies of Science focused on feminist technoscience interventions into the politics and “darker sides” of care (Martin et al., 2015), and the more recent on relationalities and specificities of care in East Asian Science, Technology and Society (Coopmans & McNamara, 2020). Noteworthy is also the special issue on “The politics of policy practices” in The Sociological Review Monograph, where Gill et al. (2017) discuss how policy and care are entangled, and how such entanglements could be enacted more “care-fully”. These publications have spurred rich and generative engagements about ways to attend to the affective, ethico-political and/or material layers of care, within and beyond areas traditionally thought of as related to care (such as healthcare and childcare).

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Author Biographies

Lisa Lindén

Lisa Lindén holds a PhD in Technology and Social Change and is a researcher at the Department of Sociology and Work Science, University of Gothenburg. In her research she draws upon Feminist Technoscience Studies and material-semiotics to study care and medicine, often with a focus on reproductive and sexual health. In current projects she investigates gynaecological cancer patient activism, the introduction of HPV vaccination for boys in Sweden and former patients’ experiences of gender confirmation treatment. She has published work in journals such as Science, Technology & Human Values and Qualitative Research, and in the edited volume Gendering Drugs: Feminist Perspectives of Pharmaceuticals (Palgrave).

Doris Lydahl

Doris Lydahl holds a PhD in Sociology and is a researcher at the Department of Sociology and Work Science, University of Gothenburg. In her research she draws on care studies and material semiotics to focus on everyday life and routine work as important locations where politics, science and technology meet and enact their normativities. She currently leads a project about the values of welfare technologies in elderly care. She has published work in journals such as The Nordic Journal of Science and Technology Studies, Sociology of Health and Illness and Qualitative Research.

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Published

2021-04-19