STS Circle at Harvard
[cid:[email protected]]
Richard Rottenburg
University of Halle

on

Emerging "Global Health" Institutions in Africa: Technologies and Significations

Monday, November 3
12:15-2:00 pm
Room 100F, Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street

[cid:[email protected]]

Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
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 before Thursday morning, October 30.

Abstract:   Designing and planning the future of societies, let alone world 
society at large, have been discredited and much critiqued activities since 
quite some time, yet they somehow continue with the same vigor. This, I will 
argue, is unavoidable for some very specific reasons that are good to know. 
While the “technological fix” has repeatedly been exposed as impossible, it 
continues to be an alluring dream, yet some things are changing and these need 
clarification. Technologies do indeed travel fast. However, the issue is their 
institutionalization, and this is related in specific ways to socio-technical, 
juridical and economic infrastructures and to processes of signification. 
Planned and designed attempts to improve health services in African development 
contexts offer prolific fields to examine questions on the emergence of new 
institutions in general.

Biography:   Richard Rottenburg holds a chair in anthropology at the University 
of Halle (Germany) and is currently Heuss-Professor at the New School for 
Social Research in New York (USA). His research focuses on the anthropology of 
law, organization, science and technology (LOST). He has written journal 
articles, books and edited books on economic anthropology, networks of formal 
organizations, the making of objectivity, biomedicine and governmentality, and 
on theorizing translation, experimentalization and governance. Recent 
publications in English are: Far-fetched Facts. A Parable of Development Aid, 
(2009); Travelling Models in African Conflict Management. Translating 
technologies of social ordering. Leiden and Boston: Brill (ed. with Andrea 
Behrends and Sung-Joon Park, 2014).



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