Standardisation and social ordering: A change of perspective

Authors

  • Pablo Schyfter University of Edinburgh (Scotland, UK).

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7203/metode.11.16013

Keywords:

synthetic biology, standards, infrastructures, social orders, responsibility

Abstract

This article examines standardisation in synthetic biology as a form of social coordination and ordering. I discuss standardisation by exploring what makes standards possible, and offer an understanding based on infrastructures: technical and social systems that support the existence and operation of accepted standards. By exploring the role of social infrastructures, I contend that standards depend upon social ordering: ways of arranging people in particular positions, relations, and hierarchies. I suggest that synthetic biologists ought to develop an awareness of these social orders, take responsibility for their creation, and accept accountability for their consequences, both technical and social.

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Author Biography

Pablo Schyfter, University of Edinburgh (Scotland, UK).

Lecturer at the School of Social and Political Science of the University of Edinburgh (United Kingdom). He carries out research in science and technology studies, the sociology of knowledge, and the philosophies of biology and technology. He has studied synthetic biology and written about technological ontologies, biological functionality, and metrology. Currently, he is developing research on rationality and knowledge-making in engineering.

References

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Published

2021-01-21

How to Cite

Schyfter, P. (2021). Standardisation and social ordering: A change of perspective. Metode Science Studies Journal, (11), 83–89. https://doi.org/10.7203/metode.11.16013
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Standards. The building blocks of complexity

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