Scholar

Ayo Wahlberg

H-index: 22
Biology 21%
Philosophy 16%

Reposted by: Ayo Wahlberg

kirkham.bsky.social
Pleased to share this paper for BioSocieties on snakebite in Kerala. I explore how social scientific theories of toxicity aid in conceiving of the structural vulnerabilities, diagnostic uncertainty, and multispecies health impacts that characterise snakebite's public health response.
Making sense of snakebite: the place of biological toxins in social scientific analyses of toxicity - BioSocieties
Through an ethnographic study of snakebite governance in Kerala, India, this article argues that social scientific theories of toxicity elucidate the biosocial dimensions of snakebite envenomation (SB...
link.springer.com

Reposted by: Ayo Wahlberg

cam-repro.bsky.social
Great news, the programme for our Forum next week is now live! Take a look here 👇
www.repro.cam.ac.uk/events/male-...
Not registered yet? There's still time, sign up on Eventbrite and we'll see you there!
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-male-f...

Reposted by: Ayo Wahlberg

Reposted by: Ayo Wahlberg

shobitap.org
How can technologists better serve civil society? What kinds of training do they need, and how can they serve respectfully? How can civil society organizations benefit from technologists and critical tech perspectives? Join us for our May 20th webinar! stpp.fordschool.umich.edu/event/2025/w...
Image of participants in the webinar, Making Tech Work for Everyone. How can technologists better serve civil society? What kinds of training do they need, and how can they serve respectfully? How can civil society organizations benefit from technologists and critical tech perspectives?

Join University of Michigan's Science, Technology, and Public Policy Program on May 20th for a webinar addressing these questions, featuring alumni Trevor Odelberg, Divya Ramesh, Melvin Washington II, and Annabella Vidrio as well as Managing Director Molly Kleinman, and myself! We'll feature short presentations, audience Q&A, and breakout rooms to ensure robust conversation with participants.

Reposted by: Ayo Wahlberg

johnmacartney.bsky.social
Join us to help develop recommendations to improve how "failure" is understood and experienced in HE!

We want to hear from academic researchers at ANY career stage - PhDs all the way to established professors - in ANY department or discipline.

*Please re-post to your networks!*
Join our study!
Are you a research academic based in higher education? ​

If so, we would like to invite you to an engagement workshop to discuss recommendations and accommodations that can be made to support researchers when navigating failure in higher education.​

What is the research about?​
Failure is often a predominant feature of academic research and can include things such as research grant paper rejections, non-promotion or supervision upgrades. 

We are asking you to share your views on a framework of recommendations we have developed including the usefulness of the recommendations identified.​

We would like to talk to research academics at any stage of their career (early, mid or late) who:​
Hold a research post including – PhD students, Postdoctoral researchers, Research Assistants, Associates or Fellows, Senior Research Fellows, Readers, Assistant Professors, Associate Professors or Professors (clinical or non-clinical).​

​What will I have to do?​
We would like to invite you to attend a focus group remotely over Microsoft Teams where you will discuss your experiences of failure in academic research culture. You will be asked: ​

Thoughts on accommodations to maintain wellbeing whilst navigating failure.​

To feedback on a framework of recommendations developed by the research team and how it could be implemented across research cultures. This might include what works for whom and when in regard to this topic.​

​The focus group will take between 90-120 minutes and you will receive an e-voucher as a thank you for your time.  ​

For further information, please use your institutional email address to contact us:​
Dr Celia Bernstein​
researchculturestudy@warwick.ac.uk

Reposted by: Ayo Wahlberg

asdsdeath.bsky.social
We're looking forward to hearing from Aimee Middlemiss next Weds on personhood, pregnancy loss and the politics of death for the third in our series of free, online #deathstudies events.

Book here. deathandsociety.org/etn/death-si...
ASDS logo. 

Death situated in life: personhood, pregnancy loss, and the politics of death. This talk explores how the examination of experiences of death in, and shortly after, pregnancy sheds light on many of the political issues implicated in death studies.
It draws on Aimee’s multi-sited ethnographic research about women’s experiences of second trimester pregnancy loss in England & collaborations with other researchers.

Aimee Middlemiss. Aimee is an interdisciplinary social scientist who draws on sociology, anthropology and STS to investigate the politics of reproduction and death. Book here: deathandsociety.org/online-events-series

Reposted by: Ayo Wahlberg

nyupress.bsky.social
“The New Reproductive Order” is out today! Edited by Sarah Franklin and Marcia C. Inhorn, this volume explores the transformative impact of new reproductive technologies over the past half century.

Groundbreaking and sophisticated, this collection of essays opens new horizons of scholarship.
The New Reproductive Order
The transformative impact of new reproductive technologies over the past half centuryBoth fertility and infertility are commonly depicted as individual, biol...
buff.ly

Reposted by: Ayo Wahlberg

wombatscholar.bsky.social
Medicine on a Larger Scale: Global Histories of Social Medicine, eds @ahlie.bsky.social, Jeremy Greene, and me, will be available open access from @cambridgeup.bsky.social in May 2025. In a world of growing health inequity, radical social medicine has never been more urgent!
#histstm #histmed #sts
Medicine on a Larger Scale
Cambridge Core - History of Medicine - Medicine on a Larger Scale
www.cambridge.org

Reposted by: Ayo Wahlberg

biosocieties.bsky.social
Welcome! BioSocieties is an international, interdisciplinary journal for social studies of life sciences. Founded 19 years ago, it is just as relevant today.

@biosocieties.bsky.social and @biosocieties on X, where we post our issue publications and repost when tagged.

Reposted by: Ayo Wahlberg

merrillsinger.bsky.social
My new book will be out in Spring:
It examines ecosyndemics through the lens of Planetary Health:

References

Fields & subjects

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