STS Circle at Harvard
[cid:D460598C-EB55-40A5-9D6F-B4DCE501D5E9@fas.harvard.edu]
Michael Bennett
University of Michigan,Risk Science Center

on

The Ascent of Science Fictional Futurity in Anglo-American Legal Thought

Monday, February 23
12:15-2:00 pm
K262, the Bowie-Vernon Room, Knafel Building, CGIS, 1737 Cambridge Street

[cid:D460598C-EB55-40A5-9D6F-B4DCE501D5E9@fas.harvard.edu]

Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP via our 
online<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1HbdY3j1fVcUeE-UqQ7pN5clAxQtaQX7Ux6Y0tRMM9E8/viewform>
 
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 before Thursday morning, February 19.

Abstract:   The deployment of future figures represents a mode of activity that 
is rarely explicitly invoked or centralized in legal strategy, research or 
theoretical framings, even though it is implicit in various traditional 
functions of Trans-Atlantic legal practice and tendencies of thought. Over the 
last two decades, however, this mode has become more prominent in legal 
discourse, particularly in the indicial proxy form of “science fiction.” Using 
four representative texts of considerable influence in contemporary legal 
education and practice—Bell’s (1992) The Space Traders, Posner’s (2004) 
Catastrophe, Lessig’s (2006) Code 2.0 and Susskind’s (2013) Tomorrow’s 
Lawyers—and distant reading of thousands of other texts gathered from the 
historical legal database, HeinOnline, I situate this legal futural figure’s 
deployment within the context of future- and imaginary-oriented analytical 
methods common to STS scholarship. The main goals of this exercise are to 
better understand both why and how the legal community fashions and circulates 
such figures, and to assess the constitutional and visionary work futural 
deployments do in the legal community.

Biography:   Dr. Michael G. Bennett’s research and legal consultancy focus on 
the societal implications of emerging technoscience, with particular emphasis 
on the domains of nanotechnologies, comparative intellectual property law and 
policy, legal practice and legal education. He consults and works with a wide 
range of clients and collaborators on these matters, including several academic 
institutions, intellectual property practitioners, domestic federal agencies, 
and technology governance organizations in Australia and Spain. Michael is an 
assistant research professor in the Risk Science Center and the Department of 
Health Management & Policy at the University of Michigan’s School of Public 
Health, the Special Advisor on Technology and Legal Practice at the 
Northeastern University School of Law’s NuLawLab, and a visiting Associate 
Research Professor at Arizona State’s Consortium for Science and Policy 
Outcomes. He received his juris doctorate from Harvard Law School and his 
doctorate in Science and Technology Studies from Rensselaer Polytechnic 
Institute.




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