Socio-technical governance has been of long-standing interest to science and technology studies and science policy studies. Recent calls for midstream modulation direct attention to a more complicated model of innovation, and a new place for social scientists to intervene in research, design and development. This paper develops and expands this earlier work to demonstrate how a suite of concepts from science and technology studies and innovation studies can be used as a heuristic tool to conduct real-time evaluation and reflection during the process of innovation – upstream, midstream, and downstream. The result of this new protocol is inclusivity mainstreaming: determining if and how marginalized peoples and perspectives are being maximally incorporated into the model of innovation, while highlighting common problems of inequality that need to be addressed.
CITATION STYLE
Williams, L. D. A., & Woodson, T. S. (2019). Enhancing Socio-technical Governance: Targeting Inequality in Innovation Through Inclusivity Mainstreaming. Minerva, 57(4), 453–477. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11024-019-09375-4
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