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Aging in digital
Author(s) -
ÖZDENSCHILLING TOM
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
american ethnologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.875
H-Index - 78
eISSN - 1548-1425
pISSN - 0094-0496
DOI - 10.1111/amet.13004
Subject(s) - agency (philosophy) , government (linguistics) , meaning (existential) , apprenticeship , sociology , reproduction , process (computing) , political science , environmental ethics , social science , history , ecology , epistemology , computer science , archaeology , linguistics , philosophy , biology , operating system
In British Columbia, Canada, aging forestry scientists struggle to pass on long‐term projects to younger colleagues who may never arrive. Thanks to the government of British Columbia's radical downsizing of its forestry research institutions, many of these scientists have been forced to reconceptualize the meaning of “succession.” Central to this process are computer‐based simulations of forest change, which have become critical sites of relationality for scientists struggling to sustain key experiments and their attending intellectual legacies. Digital simulations have increasingly come to mediate the expectations and shared dependencies that constitute scientific authorship. As a result, contemporary processes of institutional reproduction can depend less on deliberate enactments of agency than on subtler processes of detachment. To have their epistemic authority recognized by funders, apprentices, and collaborators, aging scientists must increasingly foreground their vulnerabilities and prepare for the possibility of their own erasure. [ expertise , aging , simulation , forestry , environmental science , British Columbia , Canada , North America ]