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The politics of scaling

Authors :
and Jack Stilgoe
Sebastian M. Pfotenhauer
Brice Laurent
Kyriaki Papageorgiou
Technische Universität Munchen - Université Technique de Munich [Munich, Allemagne] (TUM)
Centre de Sociologie de l'Innovation i3 (CSI i3)
MINES ParisTech - École nationale supérieure des mines de Paris
Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
ESADE Barcelona - Sant Cugat
Technical University of Munich (TUM)
Source :
Social Studies of Science, Social Studies of Science, SAGE Publications, 2021, pp.1-32. ⟨10.1177/03063127211048945⟩
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

International audience; A fixation on ‘scaling up’ has captured current innovation discourses and, with it, political and economic life at large. Perhaps most visible in the rise of platform technologies, big data and concerns about a new era of monopolies, scalability thinking has also permeated public policy in the search for solutions to ‘grand societal challenges’, ‘mission-oriented innovation’ or transformations through experimental ‘living labs’. In this paper, we explore this scalability zeitgeist as a key ordering logic of current initiatives in innovation and public policy. We are interested in how the explicit preoccupation with scalability reconfigures political and economic power by invading problem diagnoses and normative understandings of how society and social change function. The paper explores three empirical sites – platform technologies, living labs and experimental development economics – to analyze how scalability thinking is rationalized and operationalized. We suggest that social analysis of science and technology needs to come to terms with the ‘politics of scaling’ as a powerful corollary of the ‘politics of technology’, lest we accept the permanent absence from key sites where decisions about the future are made. We focus in on three constitutive elements of the politics of scaling: solutionism, experimentalism and future-oriented valuation. Our analysis seeks to expand our vocabulary for understanding and questioning current modes of innovation that increasingly value scaling as an end in itself, and to open up new spaces for alternative trajectories of social transformation.

Details

ISSN :
14603659 and 03063127
Volume :
52
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Social studies of science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd79158d72261a46dbd2a247c6337837