Abstracts/ les résumés
Friday / Vendredi, November 6
Public Lecture / Conférence publique
John Krige (john.krige@hsoc.gatech.edu) – Georgia Tech
Regulating the transnational flow of knowledge in research universities today: The role of the U.S. national security state after 9/11
The free circulation of knowledge across borders in academia has been progressively eroded since the 1980s by new opportunities to commercialize research and, since 9/11, by the demand for tighter control on foreign nationals by the national security state. The production of knowledge that is increasingly both dual use and close to the market, and the insertion of research universities in the global knowledge economy, has transformed the research encounter between the U.S. researchers and their colleagues and students from abroad. Two concepts of security — security by achievement and security by secrecy — pit traditional academic values of openness and the free exchange of ideas against an increasingly intrusive state apparatus that shackles scientific collaboration and undermines trust.
Saturday / Samedi, November 7
Texts, Contexts and the Movement of Knowledge (8:30-10:30)
Bill Leeming (bleeming@faculty.ocadu.ca) - OCADU
Towards Resolving the Paradox of Centre-Periphery Debates concerning the Dissemination of Scientific Knowledge in Medical Systems
This paper opens with a story about the mobility of medico-scientific knowledge and varied spatial contexts of regional genetic health centres in the United States, Canada, and the UK, and uses it to reflect on debates in a number of disciplines concerning what Warwick Anderson has described as “the localness of technoscientific networks, the situated production of ‘globality,’ the transnational process of displacement and reconfiguration, the fragmentation and hybridity of technoscience.” It especially reflects on difficult questions that have been raised about the dynamics of flow and how spatial context influences not only the generation of knowledge but also the justification, legitimation, acceptance, and application of knowledge. These generally underscore the spatial concentration of knowledge and power at certain points in time. The paper then concludes with future considerations for thinking about the means by which scientific knowledge in medical systems exercises the power that it does in the world.
Matthew Wiseman (wise5300@mylaurier.ca) – Wilfrid Laurier University
Tripartite Defence in the Cold War: Canada and the Technical Cooperation Program
This paper situates post-1945 Canadian defence research in the context of the early Cold War security environment. Canada’s scientific and technological activity in this era was influenced by alliances, most importantly its tripartite defence relationship with Britain and the United States. Yet the history of the Canadian Defence Research Board, a division of the wider defence establishment, contradicts a school of thought deeply rooted in historical scholarship on Canada’s postwar foreign relations that suggests the North American bilateral defence partnership gradually diminished Canada’s defence reliance on the Commonwealth. In fact, Canadian scientists participated in tripartite defence initiatives throughout the early decades of the Cold War. By destabilizing the continentalist school of thought, or what Robert Teigrob has called Canada’s “reorientation of national allegiances,” this paper explores transnational information exchange between tripartite nations and the creation of the Technical Cooperation Program. Ultimately, this paper argues that Canada’s postwar science and technology policy reinforced rather than impaired relations with the Commonwealth during the early Cold War.
Beth A. Robertson (bethrobertson@cmail.carleton.ca) – Carleton University
Digital Phantoms: Re-envisioning Gender and Marginal Science Across Borders, 1918-1939
Digital humanities are reshaping the historian’s craft in radical ways. This paper explores how one tool of the digital humanities—social network analysis—can help problematize how scientific authority is historically constructed and sometimes disassembled across national borders. Focusing on a case study of what might be considered a failed science, this paper uses social network analysis to map out the distinctly gendered relationships that existed between interwar psychical researchers and their unusual subjects of study. Canadian, American and British researchers argued for the scientific importance of their work while conducting transnational experiments on individuals they conceived of as particularly gifted in bridging material and metaphysical worlds. Illustrating where and when centres of power are located at different historical moments, this paper demonstrates how social network analysis in conjunction with the theories of feminist technoscience can provide important clues as to why some empirical endeavours succeed and others do not.
Mahdi Khelfaoui (khelfaoui.mahdi@courrier.uqam.ca) - UQAM
Pauline Huet (Pauline_huet@hotmail.fr) - UQAM
Operational Research at École Polytechnique de Montréal: At the Crossroads between Applied Mathematics and Industrial Engineering
Operational Research (OR) emerged as a field of research at the École Polytechnique de Montréal in the mid-1970s. Initially, it belonged to the industrial engineering department, before moving to the applied mathematics department in 1984, until the two departments merged ten years later. In this paper, we will see how OR constituted initially a border dividing tenants of qualitative and quantitative approaches in industrial engineering, how it quickly grew in the department of applied mathematics and later became the only field of common interest between the researchers in applied mathematics and industrial engineering. The evolution of OR is to be understood by analyzing the different modes of emergence and evolution of two specialties at the EPM: applied mathematics developed more as a scientific discipline, while industrial engineering was anchored in the engineering profession.
Beth A. Robertson (bethrobertson@cmail.carleton.ca) – Carleton University
Digital Phantoms: Re-envisioning Gender and Marginal Science Across Borders, 1918-1939
Digital humanities are reshaping the historian’s craft in radical ways. This paper explores how one tool of the digital humanities—social network analysis—can help problematize how scientific authority is historically constructed and sometimes disassembled across national borders. Focusing on a case study of what might be considered a failed science, this paper uses social network analysis to map out the distinctly gendered relationships that existed between interwar psychical researchers and their unusual subjects of study. Canadian, American and British researchers argued for the scientific importance of their work while conducting transnational experiments on individuals they conceived of as particularly gifted in bridging material and metaphysical worlds. Illustrating where and when centres of power are located at different historical moments, this paper demonstrates how social network analysis in conjunction with the theories of feminist technoscience can provide important clues as to why some empirical endeavours succeed and others do not.
Bertrum H. MacDonald and James D. Ross (bertrum.macdonald@dal.ca) – Dalhousie University
Crossing Borders in Scientific Literature: The Case of Environmental Assessment Reports
Scientific publications have often highlighted discoveries without regard to national borders. Today, a new scientific journal article is published every twenty seconds, in addition to other forms of scientific information. Many initiatives to synthesize and reduce this literature have been pursued. Since the 1970s, major environmental assessment reports have become one method. The reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which encompass thousands of scientific publications, are well-known. Numerous other state of the environment reports populate the publication landscape. To illustrate the history of this form of literature, we will discuss three recent marine environmental assessment reports related to the north eastern Atlantic coast: The State of Nova Scotia’s Coasts Report, the State of the Gulf of Maine Report, and the State of the Scotian Shelf Report. Involving many authors, editors, and illustrators, the preparation of these comprehensive reports occurred as digital technologies significantly affected publication practices. Drawing on documentary evidence and interviews with authors and editors, we will show how international models for environmental assessments were adopted and adapted to produce these reports for diverse audiences and we will also outline evidence of their use in decision making contexts.
Science without Borders or Borderless Science? Issues and Approaches in Fisheries and Ocean Science (8:30-10:30)
Eric Mills (e.mills@dal.ca) – Dalhousie University
"Too late for action." M.L. Fernald, A.G. Huntsman and the Belle Isle Strait Expedition of 1923
A. G. Huntsman’s Belle Isle Strait Expedition of 1923, the first oceanographic expedition organized by a Canadian, can be envisioned as modeled on the Canadian Fisheries Expedition of 1915, in which Huntsman had been a junior partner to the Norwegian fishery biologist Johan Hjort. Examination of Huntsman’s documents shows that this is too facile a view. For example, Huntsman hoped that one of the participants would be M.L. Fernald, a botanist from the Gray Herbarium at Harvard University. Huntsman’s unpublished manuscripts on the expedition, purportedly to give information about the oceanic conditions leading to cod production, show that its results ranged from archaeology to botany. Although Fernald did not take part, his reasons for being interested in the expedition were to document his hypothesis that the flora of northeastern North America had spread there along an emergent borderland after the last glaciation. Huntsman’s aims were less transparent, but it is clear that this Canadian / United States research partnership was intended to be about more than cod. In this, it had more in common with early 19th century natural history expeditions than with the marine science expeditions that followed it a few decades later.
Jennifer Hubbard (jhubbard@ryerson.ca) – Ryerson University
Reason, Evidence, and Mid-Century Fisheries Science: the Symposium on Fish Populations, Toronto, 1947
Carmel Finley has recently shown how American politics formed international fisheries management policies based on loosely constructed ideals in fisheries biology. She argues that at the 1955 UN International Technical Conference on the Conservation of the Living Resources of the Sea the US diplomatic agenda, not science, became the foundation of the dominant post-war ‘paradigm’ of fisheries management. This paradigm upheld exploiting international fisheries at the highest possible – and yet supposedly sustainable–levels, to generate a Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY). American fisheries biologists apparently shared a conviction that MSY was scientific and achievable, and swayed other nations’ scientists to their views. Yet a few years earlier key US fisheries biologists had shared concerns about safeguarding exploited fish stocks. What influenced their shift in favour of highly exploitive industrialized fishing practices and against enlarged protective national coastal zones? This paper will argue that a little-noticed gathering of marine and aquatic fisheries biologists from across North America in 1947 was instrumental in effecting this change in attitude. Canadian fisheries biologist A.G. Huntsman convened ‘A Symposium on Fish Populations,’ at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto. This paper will explore this meeting’s genesis, disputed ideas, and long-term influences on fisheries science and policy.
Carmel Finley (Carmel.Finley@oregonstate.edu)
Redfish and the Construction of Pacific Fisheries Biology
During the 1940s, fishermen along the West coast of Canada and the United States began to trawl for bottomfish. With military contracts creating a demand for fish, the burgeoning trawl fleet has its first steady markets. After 1945, boats began to fish in deeper water, beyond 90 fathoms, and found large numbers of a medium-sized, bright red fish, Sebastes alutus. The fish was filleted and marketing as Pacific ocean perch. Markets grew steadily until 1966, when a fleet of Soviet factory processing ships and catcher boats descended from the Bering Sea, targeting perch stocks. The American and Canadian governments both built research ships to study Pacific fisheries. The Americans launched the John N. Cobb in 1949, and the Canadians built the G.B Reed in 1962; the science and international consensus that emerged, based on preconceptions about fish biology, was inadequate to protect this species.
Will Knight (wknight@technomuses.ca) - Canada Agriculture and Food Museum
A Landscape of Science and Dispossession: the Go Home Bay Biological Station
This paper examines freshwater fisheries science—and its relation to native dispossession—at Canada’s first freshwater research laboratory, the Go Home Bay Biological Station on Georgian Bay. Established in 1901, the station was part of the Madawaska Club, a private summer resort operated by and for members of the University of Toronto. The club was established on shoreline territory previously ceded by the Chippewa of central Ontario, who continued to use the area for food provisioning. Situating the station as an example of “resort science” described by Phillip Pauly and Helen Rozwadowski, this paper explores how the station, as a “landscape of science,” may have also contributed to further native dispossession through its research program. In particular, this paper considers how Go Home Bay research into game fish, which both anglers and native fishers pursued, may have also reinforced the cultural boundaries established around fish that excluded subsistence use.
Knowledge within and across Disciplines (10:45-12:15)
Jordan Schoenherr (jordan.schoenherr@carleton.ca) – Carleton University
A Brief History of the Canadian Society for Brain Behaviour and
Cognitive Science (CSBBCS) and Historical Parallels with the Psychonomics Society
Formal organization is a prerequisite for modern science. The history of psychology is punctuated by the establishment of professional organization to meet the needs of practitioners in experimental and applied settings. In Canada, the Canadian Psychological Association formed to meet the needs to Canadian psychologists in a comparable manner to that of the American Psychological Association. A historical study of the formation of two experimental psychological societies, the Psychonomics Society in the United States and the CSBBCS in Canada, suggests important parallels that reflect a tension within North American psychology. The themes of historical stability and continued disciplinary fragmentation are discussed in an evolutionary framework.
Ernie Hamm (ehamm@yorku.ca) – York University
Disappointment on the Great Divide: Geology, Its History and A. P. Coleman
A. P. Coleman was an outstanding figure in the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century Canadian science and an important actor in the international geological community. Remembered today largely for his contributions to glaciology, I argue that Coleman’s work is of considerable interest for the questions it raises about that hoary category known as disciplinary history. Coleman established his international reputation when geology was a discipline at the height of its prestige, thanks in large part to the ways it was deeply intertwined with ideas of nation building, economic prosperity, and even social progress. Yet it was also a discipline that ranged freely across borders, be they borders between states, technology and science, or between the knowledge of experts and indigenous knowledge, or the divides of art and science. Coleman’s work shows that geology’s great public success played not on it being an “interdisciplinary” science avant la lettre, but by giving little heed to borders of all sorts.
Sylvia Nickerson (nickerso@yorku.ca) – York University
Generating the Mathematical Book in Canada: Mathematical Printing at the University of Toronto Press
The present paper considers how developments in print culture helped enabled a nascent mathematical practice in early twentieth century Canada. I argue that the development of mathematical printing at the University of Toronto Press (UTP) in the 1920s helped facilitate a printed culture of mathematics that in turn helped facilitate a native mathematical culture. Composing mathematics for print required specialized compositional skill, and the difficulty of having original science printed in Canada compelled William Dawson, the first President of the Royal Society of Canada to lament in 1883 that “much that would be of scientific value” failed to be recorded because the means of publication in Canada were “altogether inadequate”. When the University of Toronto Press undertook the printing of the Proceedings of the International Mathematical Congress (Toronto, 1924) this book was on the cutting edge of scientific printing in Canada. One of the first publications containing articles of original mathematics to be printed in Canada, the production of the Proceedings, supervised by mathematician John Charles Fields, apprenticed the University of Toronto Press in the composition and preparation of original mathematics. This 1928 publication built the capacity of the Press’s compositors, enabling them to prepare further work in mathematics for several Toronto publishers and for the Canadian Mathematical Society later in the twentieth century.
Infrastructures and Assemblage (10:45-12:15)
Mark Sholdice (msholdic@uoguelph.ca) – University of Guelph
The Influence of the Ontario Hydro Commission on the Idea of the Tennessee Valley Authority, 1920-1933
During the 1920s, progressives in the US Congress, led by Senator George Norris of Nebraska, fought plans to privatize the government nitrate works at Muscle Shoals, Alabama. These progressives wanted the federal government to produce inexpensive fertilizer and electricity. They drew inspiration from Ontario's Hydro-Commission, from which they sought ideological and technological support. The campaign successfully fended-off privatization attempts by the Republican presidents of the era (one involved Henry Ford), and led to the creation of the Tennessee Valley Authority in 1933 under Franklin D. Roosevelt. Throughout, these reformers worked to import the Ontario Hydro model into the American South.
Sean Nicklin (sean.nicklin@gmail.com) – University of Ottawa
By Air and Sea: Transoceanic Aviation and Weather Ships in the North Atlantic
Transatlantic air travel was set to grow rapidly after the Second World War. The North Atlantic's notoriously bad weather posed a problem for those early flights, as land-based observatories could not monitor conditions at sea. Canada, the United States, and several European countries addressed this shortcoming with a network of ship-based weather stations scattered across the ocean: the North Atlantic Ocean Station (NAOS) program. Over the decades that followed, these ships worked together to give transatlantic flights from all countries the most accurate and up-to-date meteorological reports possible. Despite European support for the program, American funding cuts diminished the utility of the fleet. The program was abandoned altogether by the 1980s with the advent of weather buoys and satellite observations. While it ran, the NAOS program was a model for international cooperation in support for the public good.
Petra Dolata (pdolata@ucalgary.ca) – University of Calgary
Arctic Oil and Gas Exploration in the 1970s: Negotiating the Making and Using of Technology
When oil and gas exploration began in earnest in the Canadian High Arctic in the 1970s, companies involved such as Panarctic Oil or Dome Petroleum faced various technological obstacles. These included drilling and support operations in ice conditions as well as transportation to consumers in the South. As engineers were looking for solutions to these challenges they had to cross cultural borders since they had to negotiate between corporate stakeholders who focused on costs and feasibility of technology and the national government who had a developmental stake in the Arctic and supported a ‘Buy Canadian’ agenda. What all three groups of actors seemed to share was technological optimism, which helped establish the Arctic as a site for technological advances whether with respect to artificial islands, drill ships, caissons or LNG carriers. Yet, the commercial success of these was often impeded by the different objectives between making technology and using technology.
Spaces, Architectures, and Boundaries (1:15-2:45)
Jocelyn Wills (jwills@brooklyn.cuny.edu) - CUNY
Surveillance Capitalism and the Continental Integration of Satellite Technologies and the Military-Industrial-Academic Complex
My paper will explore the ways in which surveillance capitalism incorporated satellite-based technologies, firms, entrepreneurs, and workers in Canada into regional military alliances, particularly with the United States. I employ research on the 45-year history of Canada’s MacDonald, Dettwiler and Associates (MDA) as a case study in this development. Founded in Vancouver, British Columbia during 1969, MDA has evolved from a four-person software consultancy into a multinational systems integrator and prime commercial and government procurement contractor for global surveillance and the interactive use of communications, earth observation, and reconnaissance satellites. MDA is also a major provider of the ground stations that receive, process, archive, and exploit satellite data, robots working in outer space, and the navigational systems that support aircraft (including unmanned aerial vehicles; aka UVAs/drones). The paper will first provide an overview of satellite-based surveillance technologies, their applications and users, and the role that interconnected power structures and systems integration play in daily life. I then turn to Canada-US defence production sharing agreements and the Cold War developments that provided the context for MDA’s participation in surveillance capitalism. Finally, I focus on the MDA case, and what lessons we might draw from the firm’s stages of development, including the ways in which MDA’s technological enthusiasts adjusted to their roles as participants in a North American military-industrial-academic complex. Although they did not work on surveillance technologies for overtly political reasons, MDA’s scientists and engineers played a part in turning satellites into a multi-billion dollar commodity and outer space into a competitive, militarized zone. Like other technological enthusiasts, they embraced satellite technology, the commercialization of space, and a notion of “the end of ideology.” In practice, their work ultimately led to more efficient data mining systems and precision surveillance, the enhancement of first-strike targeting capabilities, and the use of robotics for capitalist expansion and permanent war preparedness. Their engineering systems also helped to remove the last barriers to routine aerial surveillance and tracking of everyday life. It would, however, be a mistake to see MDA’s personnel as principal architects in this change. MDA has operated within a context and framework girded by powerful forces at the nexus of state, capital, and the polar tug of global political power games. That nexus has included myths about the power of outer space, debates over satellites and sovereignty, competitive posturing for the spoils of surveillance-based commerce, expanding economic crises, the further consolidation of the global elite, and increased uncertainty (including job insecurity among the technology workers who helped to construct the architecture for global surveillance). Viewing MDA within a macro-level, historical context therefore allows us to see a world much less glamorous than politicians and surveillance capitalists would have us believe.
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