Conclusion
- James Maguire(author)
- Laura Watts(author)
- Brit Ross Winthereik(author)
Export Metadata
- ONIX 3.0
- ThothCannot generate record: No publications supplied
- Project MUSECannot generate record: No BIC or BISAC subject code
- OAPENCannot generate record: Missing PDF URL
- JSTORCannot generate record: No BISAC subject code
- Google BooksCannot generate record: No BIC, BISAC or LCC subject code
- OverDriveCannot generate record: Missing Long Abstract
- Thoth
- ONIX 2.1
- EBSCO HostCannot generate record: No PDF or EPUB URL
- ProQuest EbraryCannot generate record: No PDF or EPUB URL
- EBSCO Host
- CSV
- JSON
- OCLC KBARTCannot generate record: Missing Landing Page
- BibTeX
- CrossRef DOI depositCannot generate record: No work or chapter DOIs to deposit
- MARC 21 RecordCannot generate record: MARC records are not available for chapters
- MARC 21 MarkupCannot generate record: MARC records are not available for chapters
- MARC 21 XMLCannot generate record: MARC records are not available for chapters
Title | Conclusion |
---|---|
Contributor | James Maguire(author) |
Laura Watts(author) | |
Brit Ross Winthereik(author) | |
License | https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ |
Copyright | James Maguire, Laura Watts, Brit Ross Winthereik |
Publisher | Mattering Press |
Published on | 2021-05-01 |
Page range | pp. 209–213 |
James Maguire
(author)James Maguire is Assistant Professor at the IT University of Copenhagen. His work focuses on the manifold interfaces between, and within, environmental and digital concerns. His current book project is an ethnographic exploration of the temporal and political conse- quences of energy extraction in Iceland. His ongoing research is oriented towards sustain- able digitalization; an enquiry into how digitalization has become an object of attention for sustainable thinking. This involves projects that explore the paradoxical relationship between the deleterious environmental effects of digital processes and their promissory imaginaries of climate mitigation, as well as those that speculate about, and activate, alternative ways of creating more ethically inflected digital futures.
Laura Watts
(author)Laura Watts is a writer, poet, ethnographer of futures, and Senior Lecturer in Energy & Society within Geosciences, University of Edinburgh. As a science and technology stud- ies (STS) scholar, her research is concerned with the effect of ‘edge’ landscapes on how the future is imagined and made, along with an exploration of different writing methods. For the past decade she has been working with people and places around energy futures in the Orkney islands, Scotland. Her latest book Energy at the End of the World: An Orkney Islands Saga (MIT Press) was shortlisted for the Saltire Research Book of the Year, and she won the International Cultural Innovation Prize 2017, as part of the Reconstrained Design Group, for a community-built energy storage device designed from spare parts. For more on her work see www.sand14.com.
Brit Ross Winthereik
(author)Brit Ross Winthereik is full Professor at the IT University of Copenhagen in the Technologies in Practice group and head of the Center for Digital Welfare. She has published on public sector digitalisation, information infrastructures, and ethnography for anthropology and STS audiences. She is co-author of Monitoring Movements in Development Aid: Recursive Infrastructures and Partnerships (MIT Press, 2013) with Casper Bruun Jensen, and co-editor of Electrifying Anthropology: Exploring Electrical Practices and Infrastructures (Bloomsbury, 2019) with Simone Abram and Thomas Yarrow, and of Experimenting with Ethnography: A Companion to Analysis (Duke, 2021) with Andrea Ballestero. She is part of the Anthropology of Technology network which edits Handbook for the Anthropology of Technology (Palgrave Handbook Series, 2022). She is a frequent participant in public debates on issues related to public digitalization, and appointed member of the Digital Advisory Council for the Academy of the Technical Sciences in Denmark. She was PI of the Alien Energy project (2013–2016) and of the Data as Relation project (2017–2020).