CFP Extended Deadline (21 December 2014): Special Issue on Science, Technology and the Nation, "Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism" (SEN) Journal
CFP Extended Deadline: Special Issue on
Science, Technology and the Nation, Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism (SEN)
Journal
Science and technology have become
closely interwoven within the larger processes of national development,
nation-building and citizenship. Scientific and technological innovation is
often seen as the benchmark through which nation states enact claims of
modernisation and progress, by asserting their competitive status in larger
geopolitical hierarchies differentiating ‘developed’ from ‘developing’ states.
Nuclear power is one such example, which provides both an advantage in warfare
as well as in the ready availability of clean energy. Similarly, large
hydroelectric power plants are able to sustain an extensive irrigated
agriculture system, in addition to providing a strategic geopolitical advantage
to the country in which they are located. Biomedical innovation and the
development of new medical technologies in recent decades have come to
constitute an important means through which many countries seek to establish
national, scientific and entrepreneurial prestige.
Recent research has focused on how
technology (Adria 2010), megaprojects (Sangvai 1994) and the seemingly
borderless space of the Internet are likewise imbued with national sentiment,
especially within diaspora populations (Miller and Slater 2000;
Bernal 2006; Eriksen 2007). However, the 'soft effects’ of technological
advancement are not the only avenues for critical examination. Particularly
in light of the changing geopolitical and ethical landscape within these
domains, current scholarship (Jasanoff 2005; Gottweis, Salter and Waldby 2009;
Ong and Chen 2010) is moving beyond more normative analyses to examine processes
around the co-production of science and society.
The proposed special issue seeks to
examine the domain of science and technology through the analysis of
underexplored discursive constructions, forms of citizenship, national
belonging and scientific cultures. Contingent on this is an exploration of how
latest or ongoing scientific or technological projects and transnational
networks (large infrastructures, digital platforms, scientific collaborations,
and international regulatory frameworks) modify prevalent understandings
of the interrelation between science, technology and the nation.
Specifically, we hope to address the following questions:
· What is the correlation between
scientific and technological progress and the citizen’s perceived sense of
patriotism and belonging to the nation?
· How are innovative projects portrayed
by the ruling elites and in what way does this help them legitimise existing
power structures?
· To what extent do current scientific
and technological cultures either reproduce or undermine the nation through new
emphases on transnational collaboration and networks?
· In what ways does this impact on the
construction of a national identity?
We invite the submission of high-quality
interdisciplinary articles to further our understanding of these topics.
Possible themes include:
• Science, citizenship and sovereignty
• Bionationalism and “biotech
nationalism”
• Megaprojects (such as nuclear plants,
large hydroelectric stations, and bridges) and nationalism
•International harmonization projects,
regulation and local contexts
• Governmentality and science
• Transnational/ diaspora mediascapes
literature/ virtual citizenship
The editors welcome submissions of
contributions from established scholars, research students, post-doctoral
fellows and lecturers in the early stages of their career.
For submissions to be considered for
publication in the special issue, please ensure your paper reaches us by 21 December 2014.
We request you limit your submission to
8,000 words, excluding bibliography and references. All papers must be submitted
online via http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/sena.
All inquiries can be addressed to
Filippo Menga at filippomenga[at]gmail.com.
For author guidelines and additional
information, please visit the journal’s home page:
http://www.wiley.com/bw/submit.asp?ref=1473-8481&site=1
Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism
(SEN) is a fully peer-reviewed journal, published by Wiley-Blackwell on behalf
of the Association of Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism (ASEN).
SEN publishes three issues per year on
the themes of ethnicity, nationalism and identity, and encourages innovative
submissions from a broad range of disciplines and regions.
References
Adria, Marco. Technology and Nationalism.
McGill-Queen's University Press, 2010.
Bernal, Victoria. "Diaspora,
cyberspace and political imagination: the Eritrean diaspora online." Global Networks 6.2
(2006): 161-179.
Eriksen, Thomas Hylland.
"Nationalism and the Internet*." Nations and Nationalism 13.1 (2007):
1-17.
Gottweiss, Herbert, Brian Salter and
Catherine Waldby. 2009. The
Global Politics of Human Embryonic Stem Cell Science: Regenerative Medicine in
Transition. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
Jasannoff, Sheila. 2005. Designs by Nature. Princeton:
Princeton University Press.
Miller, Daniel, and Don Slater. The Internet. Oxford:
Berg, 2000.
Ong, Aihwa and Nancy Chen (eds).
2010. Asian Biotech:
Ethics and Communities of Fate. Durham: Duke University Press.
Sangvai, Sanjay. “‘Nation',
'Nationalism' and Mega Projects.” Economic
and Political Weekly 29.10 (1994): 537-540.