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Schlagwörter:
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Zusammenfassung:
Politics is generally regarded as a struggle for power in a situated present, with parties seeking control over goods, resources, lives, and other forms of capital. Modern science and technology, however, have shifted the temporal horizon of political struggle from the present to the future, with significant implications for social order. In her talk, Sheila Jasanoff explores the ways in which sociotechnical imaginaries, or shared visions of futures achievable through science and technology, have given rise to new forms of politics, with altered understandings of citizenship, voice, and expression. In this process, classic lines of territoriality and sovereignty have blurred, along with once clear distinctions between public and private power. Drawing on examples of future-making through biological and information sciences, she discusses how these sociotechnical imaginaries are creating new forms of political expression and subjectivity, and speculates on their implications for constitutionalism in the 21st century.