Claiming authority producing standards. Call for papers
Claiming authority, producing standards:
The IAEA and the history of radiation
protection
Organizers:
Martin
Kusch, Department of Philosophy, University of Vienna
Maria
Rentetzi, Lise Meitner Fellow (FWF), Department of Philosophy, University of
Vienna
conference website: http://rentetzi.weebly.com/
Venue: University of Vienna, Institute
for Philosophy
Dates: 3-4 June 2016
Keynote speakers:
Angela Creager,
Thomas M. Siebel Professor in the History of Science, Department
of History, Princeton University
Soraya de Chadarevian, Professor,
Department of History and the Institute for Society and Genetics, University of
California, Los Angeles.
Jacob Darwin Hamblin,
Professor of History, Department of History, Oregon State University
Deadline for submission: 31 January
2016
This
workshop seeks to bring together scholars working on the history of radiation
protection and the role of the International Atomic Energy Agency in shaping,
standardizing, and controlling this field. We are interested in papers
employing historical, philosophical, or sociological methods in order to
investigate the notion of standardization as political, and to critically
analyze those legal, political, and diplomatic interests that have shaped
radiation protection standards in all major areas of radiation exposure. We wish to focus especially (but not
exclusively) on the role of the International Atomic Energy Agency as scientific,
metrological and – above all -- political organization responsible for (inter
alia) the standardization and development of codes of practices in radiotherapy
and diagnostics; for supporting the implementation in hospitals and calibration
laboratories; for producing codes of conduct on the safety of radioactive waste
and spend fuel management; for providing advisory services to all United
Nations Members States; and for leading the international coordination of major
institutions in the field such as the International Radiation Protection
Association and the World Health Organization.
Radiation
protection—the science and practices of preventing harmful effects resulting
from ionizing radiation to humans and the environment—has a long history. Since
the discovery of radioactivity more than a century ago, scientists have
attempted to introduce radiation protection standards. Such standards are specifications
and criteria for the evaluation of biological effects of radiation to human
tissues and of the harmful effects to the environment. In the early days,
producing such standards faced many challenges: how to define the appropriate
unit of radiation; how to invent suitable measurement devices; how to detect, and
agree on, the effects of radiation on biological systems; or how to settle the
acceptable risk to radiation exposure. The evolution of standards, and the
controversies that emerged, reflect the complexity of scientists' collaborative
production and dissemination of what eventually comes to be considered as
objective and reliable knowledge. It also reveals the powerful role of those
scientific institutions that assumed the task to create these standards. From
the British Roentgen Society, and its first recommendations to users of x-ray
technologies in 1915, to the establishment of the field of "health
physics" at the Met Lab of the University of Chicago during World War II,
scientific institutions enforced new attitudes towards acceptable risk,
permissible radiation doses, and radiation protection.
After
World War II the rapid development and adoption of
new medical technologies -- such as the radioisotope
teletherapy units and the development of nuclear industry -- posed
numerous challenges in the field of radiation protection. During the era of
what has been known as “the peaceful uses” of nuclear energy, the IAEA
gradually took the lead in the field of radiation protection. At the same time it plays a crucial role in
an exceptionally broad range of scientific and political matters: the
establishment of nuclear industry worldwide, the provision of technical
assistance, the education of generations of scientists in nuclear matters all
over the world, the exercise of political power in order to safeguard the use
of nuclear energy and to control the several national nuclear programs.
Today,
the renewed interest in nuclear power plants and the use of advanced medical
technologies pose new challenges to the field of radiation protection. IRPA's
2012 conference theme, "Living with Radiation, Engaging with Society"
leaves no doubt that radiation protection is indeed a social and political
concern.
We
would like to make visible the tensions between politics and science in the
field of radiation protection. Thus we invite papers primarily on the following
topics:
1.
the
notion of standardization as a theoretical framework for understanding the
set of practices that surround acts of radiation protection;
2.
the
history of radiation protection in relation to major scientific and
international organizations with our main focus on the role of the IAEA;
3.
standards,
radiation units, and notions of radiation risk: What have been the changing
notions of risk in relation to radiation? How have these notions shaped
scientists' ideas about standards and radiation dosimetry?
4.
the
collaboration between IAEA and WHO: What
kinds of research agendas have shaped the IAEA/WHO collaboration in the field
of radiation protection?
5.
the role
of international organizations in the production and circulation of
knowledge about the effects of radiation on humans and the environment;
6.
the
handling and transportation of radioactive materials and waste: What kind of diplomatic issues have
arisen in relation to radioactive disposal for example? How have these issues
shaped environmental policy making and public opinions around radiation
protection?
Please
send extended abstracts of 500 words and a one page cv to mrentetz@vt.edu by January 31, 2016.
--
Maria Rentetzi
Lise Meitner Fellow (FWF)
University of Vienna
Institute for Philosophy
1010 Wien, Universitätsstraße 7 (NIG)
T: +43-1-4277-46425
eFax: +43-1-4277-846425
visit our website for updates on standardization workshop
Associate Professor
National Technical University of Athens
Department of Humanities, Social Sciences and Law
School of Applied Mathematics and Physical Sciences
Zografou Campus, Zografou 15780
Athens, Greece
tel. +30 210 6106537 , fax +30 210 7721618