School of Social and Political Science

A Social Science of Databases - Workshop Symposium

Category
Workshop
18 June 2025
10:00 - 16:00

Venue

G0.1 High School Yards Teaching Centre
The University of Edinburgh
EH1 1LZ

Description

This event presents six papers from social science scholars thinking about the creation, maintenance, and gestalt qualities of the machines that house and transmit data, about databases. A free lunch will be provided for all attendees.

Contemporary society is marked by a will to data. The accumulation of a form of empirical material that is tabulated, quantifiable and ontologically fixed as ‘data’ is now a de facto imperative for the improvement of society ethically, normatively, and scientifically. What Hoeyer has called ‘intensified data sourcing’ (Hoeyer, 2023) has in this way become a prominent feature of public institutions, private organisations, and —increasingly— of technologies of the self (oft rendered material through bespoke and individuated ‘smart’ devices whose primary function is the production of ‘data’).

Social scientists attending to data practices have evidenced the sociality of data usages (Beaulieu & Leonelli, 2020), of processes of transformation in creating data (Bowker & Star, 1999), and of the curation of data towards instrumental purposes (Tempini, 2021). In so doing data has been productively theorised and empirically located as a socio-material practice. However, less has been said about the machines built to store and manage data; about data infrastructures. These machines represent a novel opportunity for understanding our contemporary societies. Where data sourcing often prefigures its usages, where value is located not in the ends data is put to (in the knowledge that is produced), but in the presence of data at all (in the size and ‘quality’ of the database) (See: Cuffe, 2025), the understanding of the machines which house data becomes a more urgent empirical problem.


WORKSHOP SYMPOSIUM [provisional] AGENDA

10am - Open
Coffee and tea

10:30am - Opening remarks

10:45am - Papers [provisional listing]

  • The Appraisal Machine. Archival Frictions in Data-Driven European Security [Megan Hadasa Leal Causton]
  • Hidden In Plain Sight: Data Centre (In)Visibilities In Austrian Media [Carsten Horn]
  • The Database As Epistemic Engine: Incentives In Academic Publishing [Paul Stevens]

12:15pm - Lunch [provided]

1pm - Papers [provisional listing]

  • Database Ontologies: The Concretisation of Techno-Certainty [Max Perry]
  • Valuing Data, Making Data Valuable: Valuation Practices Across Biodata Resources [Roman Hansen]
  • Title TBC [Laura Savolainen]

2:30pm - Break
Coffee and tea

3pm - Manifesto for social science of databases
Q&A [roundtable]

3:45pm - Closing remarks

4pm - Close

Price

Free

Location