The Clarendon Law Lectures 2025-26: Science, Technology and the Constitution of Modernity - Lecture 1

Event date
18 November 2025
Event time
17:30 - 19:30
Oxford week
MT 6
Audience
Anyone
Venue
The Gulbenkian Lecture Theatre
Speaker(s)

Professor Sheila Jasanoff
Harvard Kennedy School

Science, Technology and the Constitution of Modernity

The first lecture will be followed by reception drinks and canapes at the Gulbenkian Foyer from 18:45 until 19:45.

Please register separately for each lecture you wish to attend. 

Abstract:

Science and technology have been recognized for more than a century as pervasive forces in modern life, profoundly shaping how we as individuals and societies understand the limits of our capacities and the horizons of what we can become. By contrast, law remains for most people the repository of the shared values and instruments with which we govern our lives. On this widely accepted account, facts and artifacts come first and norms afterwards. Whether formal or informal, law tells us how we should behave only in the light of what science makes known and how technologies enable us to act. Law therefore is seen as a follower, not a leader, and its power to make norms is often seen as lagging behind more rapid advances in science and technology.

Over the past half-century, the field of science and technology studies (STS) has demonstrated that this relationship between is and ought is largely an artifact of social thought and it profoundly misrepresents the relations between science, technology and law in modernity. Law no less than science creates the conditions within which we understand the nature of our existence and articulate the purposes of our being. This co-productionist view of law, science and technology as jointly constituting what is stable and desirable in both nature and society provides the theoretical framework for these lectures.

 

Found within

Law and Technology