Search Results for: CASTAC

Ciencia y justicia: monitoreo del agua “imparcial” y la resistencia a la mina Escobal

Nota del editor: Esta es la tercera publicación en la serie “The Spectrum of Research and Practice in Guatemalan Science Studies” (La gama de la investigación y la práctica en los estudios de la ciencia guatemalteca). Un proceso de monitoreo de agua alrededor un sitio minero en conflicto destacó el papel central, pero también impugnado e indeterminado, de la ciencia en las luchas ambientales. Los grupos con objetivos opuestos y distintas concepciones de la ciencia y la política producen (o influyen en la producción de) distintas formas e interpretaciones de la ciencia para fundamentar sus afirmaciones y influir la trayectoria de los conflictos ambientales. (read more...)

Science and Justice: “Impartial” Water Monitoring and Resistance to the Escobal Mine in Guatemala

Editor’s note: This is the third post in an ongoing series called “The Spectrum of Research and Practice in Guatemalan Science Studies.” A water monitoring process conducted around a controversial mine site in Guatemala highlighted the central, but also contested and indeterminate, role of science in environmental struggles. Groups with competing aims, and distinct conceptions of science and politics produce (or influence the production of) distinct forms and interpretations of science to ground their claims and shape the outcome of environmental conflicts. (read more...)

Quando o Sexo Vira uma Questão de Estado: A Peciagrafia como Método Qualitativo para Análise de Processos Jurídicos

Nos últimos dez anos, venho realizando pesquisas etnográficas sobre as decisões do Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF) sobre identidades sexuais no sistema judiciário brasileiro. Apesar das diferenças neste tópico, sempre tive uma mesma pergunta norteadora: como o STF e os movimentos sociais performam o sexo como uma questão do Estado? (read more...)

When Sex Becomes a Matter of the State: Peciagraphy as a Qualitative Method for Examining Legal Cases

For the past ten years, I have been conducting ethnographic research on the Federal Supreme Court’s (STF) decisions on sexual identities in the Brazilian legal system. Despite the variety within this realm, I have always had the same guiding question: how do the STF and social movements perform sex as a matter of the state? (read more...)

PrEP in Thailand in the time of COVID-19

In 2012, the first PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis) drugs came onto the market, poised to revolutionize the field of HIV prevention. ‘The Pill’ promised to usher in a kind of sexual revolution, particularly for gay men and trans women. Sexual rights activists and health workers around the world analogized PrEP to birth control, suggesting that PrEP would allow particular sexual minority populations to secure bodily autonomy and serve as a tool for the self-management and mitigation of risk. (read more...)

Alguns Paralelos entre a Cloroquina e o AZT e Outras Disputas de Credibilidade da Ciência

Como antropóloga e pesquisadora da área dos estudos sociais da ciência e da tecnologia, grande parte da minha carreira acadêmica tem sido dedicada, com orgulho, à pesquisa e denúncia de preconceitos, desigualdades e enviesamentos nas práticas científicas e médicas. Essa crítica, longe de querer minar a credibilidade científica, vem de um lugar de profundo respeito, confiança e, ouso dizer, grande otimismo em relação a que tipo de proposta temos para a ciência a longo prazo: um projeto em que o conhecimento seja abrangente e acessível e cuja autoridade não se baseie na ocultação de informações. (read more...)

Some Chloroquine-AZT Parallels and Science’s Credibility Struggles

As an anthropologist and STS researcher, a great deal of my academic career has been proudly dedicated to studying and denouncing the bias, inequalities, and prejudice within both scientific and medical practices. Such critique, far from intending to undermine scientific credibility, comes from a place of deep respect, trust, and, I dare say, great optimism regarding what kind of project we have for science in the long term: one where knowledge is comprehensive and accessible, and where expertise is not build upon the concealment of information. (read more...)

Managing Refugee Mobilities: Global Flows of Migration Deterrence Technologies

In 2000, a United Nations Resolution designated June 20th World Refugee Day. In the week leading up to this day, countries throughout the world pay homage to the ideals of the refugee rights movement through public festivals celebrating their migrant communities’ cultures, social media campaigns on refugee resilience, and declarations of their commitment to protect those seeking asylum. Historically, nation-states have employed such public messages to emphasize their identities as benevolent, humanitarian actors.  However, what these proclamations elide is not only the violent ways that individual nations reject asylum seekers, but the collective ways that countries work together to inhibit their mobilities. Both the technologies of detection and deterrence as well as anti-refugee rhetoric, while based on insular ideas of nationhood and ‘who belongs,’ are also increasingly dependent on collaborations and partnerships with other nation-states. In attempts to control refugee movement, multiple nation states are both entangled and willingly involved in a global effort to contain, reroute, and eventually immobilize asylum seekers from the global South seeking protection in liberal democratic states. While there has always been an international refugee regime since the inception of the 1951 UN Refugee Convention, it is worth paying attention to the new ways in which nation states are learning from and relying upon each other to govern where refugees can and cannot go. (read more...)