In the past twenty years, the field of science and technology studies
(S&TS) has made considerable progress toward illuminating the
relationship between scientific knowledge and political power. These
insights are now ready to be synthesized and presented in forms that
systematically highlight the connections between S&TS and other social
sciences.
This timely collection of essays by leading scholars in the field meets
this challenge. The book develops the theme of 'co-production', showing
how scientific knowledge both embeds and is embedded in social
identities, institutions, representations and discourses. Accordingly,
the authors argue, ways of knowing the world are inseparably linked to
the ways in which people seek to organize and control it. Through
studies of emerging knowledges, research practices and political
institutions, the authors demonstrate that the idiom of co-production
importantly extends the vocabulary of the traditional social sciences,
offering fresh analytic perspectives on the nexus of science, power and
culture.