Cover’s comment Since 2010 Tecnoscienza has invited different artists to contribute with one of their works to ‘cover’ a journal issue. We thank them all once more for their kindness and willingness to donate their works. 2/10 – Autonomous Trap 001, by James Bridle 1/10 – ASCII Shell Forkbomb, by Jaromil 2/9 – NoArk, by The Tissue Culture & Art Project (Oron Catts & Ionat Zurr) in collaboration with Marcus Canning 1/9 – Touchy, by Eric Siu 2/8 – Ouroboros, by Alvaro Cassinelli 1/8 – Freedom Flies, by Chris Csikszentmihályi 1&2/7 – Velocipedia, by Gianluca Gimini 6/2 – Dispatchwork, by Jan Vormann 6/1 – Connessioni, by Fabrice De Nola 5/2 – Telstar (Wisdom) 200 (Dark bog oak, various sustainable exotic wood veneers) © by Paul Fryer 5/1 – The Table of Alliance, by Daniela Papadia 4/2 – No stars, by Alia Scalvini 4/1 – Smile of a Stem Cell: A Dialogue between Science and So- ciety, by ESTOOLS 3/2 – Public Smog (2004-ongoing), by Amy Balkin et al. 3/1 – Ospedale a mare, by Andrea Napolitano 2/2 – I Am Whatever You Want Me To Be, by Daniela Kostova 2/1 – The Beggar Robot, by Sašo Sedlaček 1/2 – God Bless DianaI, by Heman Chong 1/1 – Der Jasager, by Zaven Paré Tecnoscienza is a scientific journal focusing on the relationships between science, technology and society. The Journal is published twice a year with an open access and peer reviewed policy; it is managed by an Editorial Board with the supervision of an Advisory Board. Tecnoscienza è una rivista scientifica che indaga i rapporti tra scienza, tecnolo- gia e società. La rivista è semestrale, open access e peer-reviewed; è gestita da un Comitato Editoriale, con la supervisione di un Comitato Scientifico. Tecnoscienza by Tecnoscienza.net is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribuzione-Non commerciale-Condividi allo stesso modo 2.5 Italia License. Editorial Board Giacomo Poderi Advisory Board (IT University of Copenhagen – DK) Coordination Mariacristina Sciannamblo Maria Carmela Agodi (University of Roma (University of Napoli – IT) Attila Bruni La Sapienza – IT) Barbara Allen (University of Trento – IT) Assunta Viteritti (Virginia Tech University – USA) Paolo Magaudda (University of Roma Mario Biagioli (University of Padova – IT) La Sapienza – IT) (University of California Manuela Perrotta Davis – USA) (Queen Mary University of Wiebe Bijker London – UK) (Maastricht University – NL) Geoffrey Bowker International (University of California Irvine – USA) Correspondents Massimiano Bucchi Editorial Board Ana Delicado (University of Trento – IT) (University of Lisbon – PT) Christine Hine (University of Surrey – UK) Claudio Coletta Ignacio Farìas (University of Antwerp – BE) (Humboldt University Berlin – DE) Massimo Mazzotti Michela Cozza (University of California Aleksandra Lis Berkeley – USA) (Mälardalen University – SE) (Adam Mickiewicz University in Amade M'charek Stefano Crabu Poznań – PL) (University of Amsterdam – NL) (Politecnico of Milano – IT) Francesca Musiani Alessandro Mongili Paolo Giardullo (CNRS Paris – FR) (University of Padova – IT) (University of Padova – IT) Annalisa Pelizza Michela Nacci Roberto Lusardi (University of Bologna – IT) (University of L’Aquila – IT) (University of Bergamo – IT) Tomás Sánchez Criado Federico Neresini Enrico Marchetti (Humboldt University Berlin – DE) (University of Padova – IT) (University of Ferrara – IT) Cornelius Schubert Giuliano Pancaldi Alvise Mattozzi (University of Siegen – DE) (University of Bologna – IT) (Free University of Johan Söderberg Bozen-Bolzano – IT) (University of Gothenburg – SE) Luigi Pellizzoni (University of Pisa – IT) Sergio Minniti Marija Brajdic Vukovic (University of Padova – IT) (University of Zagreb – HR) Trevor Pinch Barbara Morsello Liliia Zemnukhova (Cornell University – USA) (Fondazione Bruno Kessler – IT) (European University at St. Lucy Suchman Giuseppina Pellegrino Petersburg – RU) (Lancaster University – UK) (University of Calabria – IT) Mariachiara Tallacchini Barbara Pentimalli (Catholic University of Piacenza – IT) Paolo Volontè (University of Roma La Sapienza – IT) (Politecnico of Milano – IT) Tecnoscienza is promoted by STS Italia (www.stsitalia.org) The Italian Society for the Study of Science and Technology Tecnoscienza c/o STS Italia, Via Carducci, 32 – 20123, Milano – Italy www.tecnoscienza.net – [email protected] – ISSN 2038-346 Table of Contents TECNOSCiENZA Italian Journal of Science & Technology Studies Vol. 11, Nr. 1, June 2020 Anniversary Issue Tecnoscienza 10th Anniversary Editors’ Introduction Attila Bruni, Paolo Magaudda and Manuela Perrotta “Do It First, Do It Yourself, and Keep on Doing It”: Ten Years of Tecnoscienza p. 7 Anniversary Reflections Lucy Suchman Alcune riflessioni sul 10° anniversario di Tecnoscienza p. 15 Massimiano Bucchi STS Challenges. The Next Ten Minutes and The Coexistence of Modes of Science p. 23 Mariachiara Tallacchini Establishing a Legitimate Knowledge-based Dialogue among Institutions, Scientists, and Citizens during the Covid-19: Some Lessons from Coproduction p. 27 Giuliano Pancaldi What Can We Learn from the History of STS in Italy? A Few Hints for the Future p. 35 Paolo Volonté The “Past Future” Twenty Years of STS and Technical Universities p. 43 4 Tecnoscienza - 11 (1) Alessandro Mongili Future Hybrids in an Unsewn World p. 51 Federico Neresini ‘The Swerve’: A Modest Hint for Appreciating Tradition and Escaping Self- Referentiality p. 59 Geoffrey C. Bowker Immunity and Community: Being Stuck and Getting Moving p. 65 Presidential Address Assunta Viteritti An STS Perspective on Pandemic p. 69 Book Reviews p. 79 R. Benjamin Race After Technology: Abolitionist Tools for the New Jim Code (2019) by María Menéndez-Blanco S. Crabu Dalla molecola al paziente. La biomedicina nella società contemporanea [From the Molecule to the Patient. Biomedicine in Contemporary Society] (2017) by Lorenzo Beltrame S. Gherardi How to Conduct a Practice-based Study: Problems and Methods. 2nd Edition, (2019) by Inti Lammi D. Rosner Critical Fabulations. Reworking the Methods and Margins of Design (2018) by Mariacristina Sciannamblo T. Saraiva and M. Macedo (eds.) Capital Científica. Práticas da Ciência em Lisboa e a História Contemporânea de Portugal [Science Capital. Science Practices in Lisbon and Contemporary History of Portugal], (2019) by Ana Delicado H. Shrobe, D. L. Shrier and A. Pentland (eds.) New Solutions for Cybersecurity (2018) by Stefano De Paoli 5 C. Sollfrank (ed.) The Beautiful Warriors. Technofeminist Praxis in the Twenty-first Century (2020) by Monika Urban S. Zuboff The Age of Surveillance Capitalism. The Fight for a Human Future: at The New Frontier of Power (2019) by Adrienne Mannov, Astrid Oberborbeck Andersen and Jaqueline de Godoy 6 Tecnoscienza - 11 (1) 7 Introduction “Do It First, Do It Yourself, and Keep on Doing It”: Ten Years of Tecnoscienza Attila Bruni Paolo Magaudda Manuela Perrotta Università di Trento Università di Padova Queen Mary University of London Abstract: The paper introduces the ten years anniversary issue of Tecno- scienza. A short history of the journal is presented, together with some re- flections about its evolution along the years. Sketching the texts that compo- se the anniversay issue, we identify some past, present and future themes in STS. Keywords: Tecnoscienza; anniversary; do-it-yourself; academic publishing; STS. Submitted: September 1, 2020 – Accepted: September 20, 2020 Corresponding author: Attila Bruni, Department of Sociology and Social Research, Via Verdi 26, 38122 Trento, Italy. Email: [email protected]. Commonly, at around 10 years old, children start to change drastical- ly: they begin to build strong relationships with peers, from whom they also experience greater pressure; they become more independent from their family and start to recognise more clearly the point of view of oth- ers; their attention span increases, while at the same time they need to cope with greater school commitments; as puberty approaches, they also become more aware of their own bodies. While not properly a child (but possibly our “non-human child”), at the end of its tenth year of life Tecnoscienza begins to deal with issues very similar to those listed above, facing increasing pressures, putting its own identity under discussion and coping with higher responsibilities. Tecnoscienza was born in 2010 (but its conception goes back to at least 2008) as an open access journal, in an academic scenario where this model of self-organised open access publishing represented the newest and in some sense the most radical alternative to traditional scientific publishing. However, over the years, this scenario has changed rapidly. Ten years ago open access publishing platforms were, at least in social TECNOSCIENZA Italian Journal of Science and Technology Studies 11 (1) pp. 7-13 – ISSN 2038–3460 www.tecnoscienza.net 2020 8 Tecnoscienza – 11 (1) and human sciences, still an embryonic phenomenon – also considered as an emerging technology surrounded by both technical and social contro- versies. Today, not only are open access journals a well-established reality in academia, but the same notion of “open access” has been actualised in several different ways. When the first issue of Tecnoscienza came out, open access was main- ly discussed as a political tool able to rebalance the huge concentration of power within the academic publishing sector. Today, open access is no longer one distinctive model, alternative to established corporate publish- ing, but it includes very different, and to some degree conflicting models, including the
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