Global Debates about Our Technoscientific Futures

Friday, 11 July 2025: 09:00-10:45
Location: SJES020 (Faculty of Legal, Economic, and Social Sciences (JES))
RC23 Sociology of Science and Technology (host committee)

Language: English

This thematic session debates the climate change, technological innovation and energy crisis in contemporary societies.Climate change is a complex, unprecedented phenomenon, that is affecting all societies, north and south of the planet. Among its causes, we highlight the social use of energy, as well the impact that changes in this sector have caused over the last few centuries. In this context, the technological innovation and its social, economic and environmental impacts are playing an increasingly vital role. Although the number of studies on these impacts are reduced, it’s possible to propose a model of types and impacts of the changes generated in the economy, the environment and lives of people, including changes in the habits of citizens, business, public policies and civil society. Several indicators of the industry and energy policies of countries indicate the development of an energy transition, and the trend appears to be increasing deployment with hybridization of plants based on alternative energy with a gradual shift towards a world of low carbon. In this sense, the session proposes to bring together researchers from different regions of the world, North-South perspectives, to discuss the transformation process in the energy matrix, with emphasis on socio-technical dimension.
Session Organizer:
Leandro RAIZER, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Brazil
Oral Presentations
What Next? Nations in the Technological Race through the 2030
Daniele ARCHIBUGI, Italy; Vitantonio MARIELLA, University of Bergamo, Italy; Antonio VEZZANI, University of Rennes, France
Exploring Poland's Socio-Technological Imaginaries in Hydrogen Technologies
Joanna GRUDOWSKA, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Poland
Trust in Science and Technoscientific Futures
Francisco Javier LOAISA, Spain; Diana JARENO RUIZ, Universidad de Alicante, Spain; Pablo DE GRACIA SORIANO, Universidad Complutense de Madrid / Universidad de Alicante
Quality of Trust in Science and the Need for Scientific Citizenship
Adriana VALENTE, Italy; Valentina TUDISCA, CNR-IRPPS, Italy; Claudia PENNACCHIOTTI, CNR-IRPPS, Italy
Blaming Others for Lack of Updated Digital Information
Line Ludvoll WARTH, Norway; Kari DYB, Norwegian Centre for E-health Research, Norway
People-Environment-Public Health: How Transdisciplinarity Can be a Bridge in Participatory Research
Chiara PICCOLO, University of Padua, Italy; Annibale BIGGERI, University of Padua, Italy
The Challenges and Obstacles of Open Science Practices
Irina DEZHINA, Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, Russian Federation
The Advancement of Knowledge amidst Exit, Voice and Silence Responses to Scientific Intimidation
David PEETZ, Griffith University, Australia; Robert HALES, Griffith University, Australia; Ian LOWE, Griffith University, Australia; Georgina MURRAY, Griffith Unviersity, Australia, Australia; Carolyn TROUP, Griffith University, Australia