Publication Type: | Journal Article |
Year of Publication: | 2000 |
Authors: | G. C. Bowker |
Journal: | Social Studies of Science |
Volume: | 30 |
Pagination: | 643–683 |
Date Published: | October |
Keywords: | biodiversity, biodiversity-informatics |
Abstract: | Biodiversity is a data-intense science, drawing as it does on data from a large number of disciplines in order to build up a coherent picture of the extent and trajectory of life on earth. This paper argues that as sets of heterogeneous databases are made to converge, there is a layering of values into the emergent infrastructure. It is argued that this layering process is relatively irreversible, and that it operates simultaneously at a very concrete level (fields in a database) and at a very abstract one (the coding of the relationship between the disciplines and the production of a general ontology). Finally, it is maintained that science studies as a discipline is able to (and should) make a significant contribution to the design of robust and flexible databases which recognize this performative character of infrastructure. 10.1177/030631200030005001 |
URL: | http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030631200030005001 |
DOI: | 10.1177/030631200030005001 |