The (In)Visible Labour Of Translation: Creating Value In Translational Medicine

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

The (In)Visible Labour Of Translation : Creating Value In Translational Medicine. / Faulkner-Gurstein, Rachel; Pinel, Clémence Pauline Cécile; Wyatt, David.

2020. Abstract fra EASST + 4S JOINT CONFERENCE, Prague, Tjekkiet.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Faulkner-Gurstein, R, Pinel, CPC & Wyatt, D 2020, 'The (In)Visible Labour Of Translation: Creating Value In Translational Medicine', EASST + 4S JOINT CONFERENCE, Prague, Tjekkiet, 18/08/2020 - 21/08/2020.

APA

Faulkner-Gurstein, R., Pinel, C. P. C., & Wyatt, D. (2020). The (In)Visible Labour Of Translation: Creating Value In Translational Medicine. Abstract fra EASST + 4S JOINT CONFERENCE, Prague, Tjekkiet.

Vancouver

Faulkner-Gurstein R, Pinel CPC, Wyatt D. The (In)Visible Labour Of Translation: Creating Value In Translational Medicine. 2020. Abstract fra EASST + 4S JOINT CONFERENCE, Prague, Tjekkiet.

Author

Faulkner-Gurstein, Rachel ; Pinel, Clémence Pauline Cécile ; Wyatt, David. / The (In)Visible Labour Of Translation : Creating Value In Translational Medicine. Abstract fra EASST + 4S JOINT CONFERENCE, Prague, Tjekkiet.

Bibtex

@conference{f343e8709653408fb747c752644b49b3,
title = "The (In)Visible Labour Of Translation: Creating Value In Translational Medicine",
abstract = "Substantial public and private investments have been funnelled into building the infrastructure of translational medicine which, according to proponents, offers huge potential for advances in health and for economic growth. Such potential, however, is predicated on a variety of labour practices. It is performed by many different categories of worker, from research nurses to data scientists, in various settings and locations. This labour is highly uneven, and often unnoticed or unseen by policymakers and the public. In this panel, we focus attention on the labour that facilitates and underpins translational medicine as a key feature of life sciences research and the bioeconomy.We are keen to explore the ways in which labour is understood, organised, and valued—including interrogating the hierarchical and gendered arrangements within which various stratified forms of labour take place. We want to question how such structures enable some practices to be rendered invisible and devalued, while some are highly privileged, prestigious, and valuable. We are equally interested in exploring if and how variously situated categories of workers contribute to the production of knowledge through their support, administrative, or care practices.We invite papers from various disciplinary, empirical and theoretical perspectives to question what it takes to produce valuable knowledge in contemporary translational medicine. This panel contributes to the growing body of STS scholarship on the bioeconomy and translational medicine, as well as literature exploring the constitutive role of care in the production of knowledge and value.",
author = "Rachel Faulkner-Gurstein and Pinel, {Cl{\'e}mence Pauline C{\'e}cile} and David Wyatt",
year = "2020",
language = "English",
note = "EASST + 4S JOINT CONFERENCE : Locating and Timing Matters: Significance and Agency of STS in Emerging Worlds ; Conference date: 18-08-2020 Through 21-08-2020",
url = "https://www.easst4s2020prague.org/",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - The (In)Visible Labour Of Translation

T2 - EASST + 4S JOINT CONFERENCE

AU - Faulkner-Gurstein, Rachel

AU - Pinel, Clémence Pauline Cécile

AU - Wyatt, David

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Substantial public and private investments have been funnelled into building the infrastructure of translational medicine which, according to proponents, offers huge potential for advances in health and for economic growth. Such potential, however, is predicated on a variety of labour practices. It is performed by many different categories of worker, from research nurses to data scientists, in various settings and locations. This labour is highly uneven, and often unnoticed or unseen by policymakers and the public. In this panel, we focus attention on the labour that facilitates and underpins translational medicine as a key feature of life sciences research and the bioeconomy.We are keen to explore the ways in which labour is understood, organised, and valued—including interrogating the hierarchical and gendered arrangements within which various stratified forms of labour take place. We want to question how such structures enable some practices to be rendered invisible and devalued, while some are highly privileged, prestigious, and valuable. We are equally interested in exploring if and how variously situated categories of workers contribute to the production of knowledge through their support, administrative, or care practices.We invite papers from various disciplinary, empirical and theoretical perspectives to question what it takes to produce valuable knowledge in contemporary translational medicine. This panel contributes to the growing body of STS scholarship on the bioeconomy and translational medicine, as well as literature exploring the constitutive role of care in the production of knowledge and value.

AB - Substantial public and private investments have been funnelled into building the infrastructure of translational medicine which, according to proponents, offers huge potential for advances in health and for economic growth. Such potential, however, is predicated on a variety of labour practices. It is performed by many different categories of worker, from research nurses to data scientists, in various settings and locations. This labour is highly uneven, and often unnoticed or unseen by policymakers and the public. In this panel, we focus attention on the labour that facilitates and underpins translational medicine as a key feature of life sciences research and the bioeconomy.We are keen to explore the ways in which labour is understood, organised, and valued—including interrogating the hierarchical and gendered arrangements within which various stratified forms of labour take place. We want to question how such structures enable some practices to be rendered invisible and devalued, while some are highly privileged, prestigious, and valuable. We are equally interested in exploring if and how variously situated categories of workers contribute to the production of knowledge through their support, administrative, or care practices.We invite papers from various disciplinary, empirical and theoretical perspectives to question what it takes to produce valuable knowledge in contemporary translational medicine. This panel contributes to the growing body of STS scholarship on the bioeconomy and translational medicine, as well as literature exploring the constitutive role of care in the production of knowledge and value.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 18 August 2020 through 21 August 2020

ER -

ID: 235070329