ABSTRACT

The relationships between knowledge, technologies, and legal processes are central to the constitution of contemporary societies. As such, they have come to provide the focus for a range of academic projects, across interdisciplinary legal studies and the social sciences. The domains of medical law and ethics, intellectual property law, environmental law and criminal law are just some of those within which the pervasive place and ‘impact’ of technoscience is immediately apparent. At the same time, social scientists investigating the making of technology and expertise - in particular, scholars working within the tradition of science and technology studies - frequently interrogate how regulation and legal processes, and the making of knowledge and technologies, are intermingled in complex ways that come to shape and define each other. This book charts the important interface between studies of law, science and society, as explored from the perspectives of socio-legal studies and the increasingly influential field of science and technology studies. It brings together scholars from both areas to interrogate the joint roles of law and science in the construction and stabilization of socio-technical networks, objects, and standards, as well as their place in the production of contemporary social realities and subjectivities.

chapter |17 pages

Contingent participation

Imaginaries of sustainable technoscientific innovation in the European Union

chapter |19 pages

The voice of silence

UK patients' silent resistance to the assisted reproduction regulations

chapter |15 pages

Unchaining research

Processes of dis/empowerment and the social study of criminal law and investigation

chapter |18 pages

Making the colposcope ‘forensic'

The medico-legal management of a controversial visualisation device

chapter |15 pages

Telling tales

Some episodes from the multiple lives of the polygraph machine

chapter |16 pages

Through the thicket and across the divide

Successfully navigating the regulatory landscape in life sciences research

chapter |17 pages

Misconduct hunting

Research integrity via law, science and technology

chapter |16 pages

Financial derivatives and the challenge of performation

Where contingency meets contestability

chapter |16 pages

Epistemic jurisdictions

Science and courts in regulatory (de)centralisation

chapter |17 pages

Un-knowing exposure

Toxic emergency housing, strategic inconclusivity and governance in the US Gulf South

chapter |17 pages

A likely story

HIV and the definition of disability in UK employment equality law, 1996–2005

chapter |16 pages

Paper prototypes