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PROGRAM PEOPLE COURSES ACTIVITIES CONTACT HOME

Visitors

Dean, Sheila Visiting Scholar

sad33@cornell.edu

Darwin Correspondence Project

Maines, Rachel Visiting Scholar

rpm24@cornell.edu

Technology and the body: sexuality, asbestos, fire safety, safety codes and standards, hedonizing technologies in hobby crafts.

Salonius, Annalisa Postdoctoral Fellow

as929@cornell.edu

Science and technology studies; laboratory studies; biomedical and life sciences; organization of research; organization of graduate and postdoctoral training; scientists; institutional context of academic science; research funding; political economy of science; qualitative, ethnographic and historical methods. Annalisa is studying the contemporary and recent historical organization of research and post-graduate training in the biomedical sciences in research universities in Canada and the U.S. She is particularly interested in changes in the organization of work in labs and post-graduate training since the 1960s, and their relationship to the dynamic institutional environment during that period.

Simakova, Elena Postdoctoral Associate

es537@cornell.edu

Social studies of science and technology, emerging technologies and accountability, innovation in practice, marketing knowledge and marketing theory, market experimentations, organizational ethnography. Elena is currently studying the brokering of collaborations and university-industry interactions around emerging nanotechnologies. More detail about the project is in the Technology and Society page at the Center for Nanoscale Systems (http://www.cns.cornell.edu/TechnologyandSociety2007-2008.html). Recent publications: Simakova, Elena and Neyland, Daniel (2008) Marketing mobile futures: assembling constituencies and creating compelling stories for an emerging technology. In: Marketing Theory 2008 (8) , pp. 91-116.

Viseu, Ana Research Associate

av225@cornell.edu

Specializes in science and technology studies, studies of innovation, and ethnographic research. Her research interests focus on questions of technological agency, embodiment and identity and the ways in which these notions are constructed and transformed through and within emergent information technologies. Ana received her doctorate from the University of Toronto in 2005.

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