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Cooperation and Competition Observed: The Emergence of Science Studies in the "Biotech Age"

Subject Area Modern and Contemporary History
History of Science
Term since 2020
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 316001474
 
The life sciences were undergoing fundamental epistemic, social, and institutional transformation starting in the 1970s: New technologies like recombinant DNA opened up opportunities for commercial applications of biomedical research and strengthened university-industry collaborations. The commercialization of molecular biology not only raised concerns about environmental hazards, secrecy of information, and the "sellout of science" but also challenged long-established norms of cooperation within the scientific community. In light of these changes, Science Studies (short STS) emerged as an interdisciplinary field that was supposed to analyze the complex interrelations between science, politics and society. The close observation of the life sciences (and biotechnology in particular), I will argue, strongly influenced the epistemic and institutional development of Science Studies: The early STS community, for instance, observed dynamics of cooperation and competition in laboratories as sites of knowledge production; at the same time, STS scholars responded to the "biotech boom" of the 1980s and 90s in critical studies. As part of the Research Group, this project analyzes cooperation and competition as categories of observation within the field of Science Studies.
DFG Programme Research Units
 
 

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