On Staging Work: How Research Funding Bodies Create Adaptive Coherence in Times of Projectification
Author(s) -
Rik Wehrens,
Lieke Oldenhof,
Roland Bal
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
science technology and human values
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.094
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1552-8251
pISSN - 0162-2439
DOI - 10.1177/01622439211005557
Subject(s) - coherence (philosophical gambling strategy) , salience (neuroscience) , accountability , sociology , work (physics) , scarcity , empirical research , public relations , political science , computer science , epistemology , economics , law , mechanical engineering , philosophy , physics , quantum mechanics , artificial intelligence , microeconomics , engineering
While recent science and technology studies literature focuses on “projectification” and its felt tensions for researchers, a surprising scarcity of empirical work addresses experiences at the “other end,” such as funding bodies often held “responsible” for tensions encountered by researchers. Actors in funding bodies experience similar tensions, however. While projectification necessitates predictability and individual project objectives, research funding is also increasingly organized in networks promoting local experimentation. Moreover, funding bodies are part of a system of accountability in which investments are legitimized politically in often reductionist ways. We argue for the salience of more detailed empirical investigations into the work of funding bodies as they navigate these tensions. We apply a dramaturgical perspective to investigate the “staging work” of program committees responsible for the management of funded programs, identifying three forms of staging work: setting the scene, temporal narration, and signifying success. All come with discursive, material, and symbolic dimensions. We develop the notion “adaptive coherence” to show how the program committee sought to maintain the coherence of the overall program despite continuous risks of fragmentation due to projectification, local experimentation, and divergence in interests. “Adaptive coherence” proves productive in incorporating the temporal and spatial dimensions of staging work in networked contexts.
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