hacker politics

29
“Hacker Politics”: the challenge of technoscientific citizenship in contemporary democracy Prof. Yurij Castelfranchi Dept. of Sociology Faculty of Phil. and Human Sciences Federal University of Minas Gerais (UFMG) [email protected]

Upload: yurij-castelfranchi-guarani-kaiowa

Post on 08-Jul-2015

415 views

Category:

Education


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Hacker Politics

“Hacker Politics”: the challenge of

technoscientific citizenship in

contemporary democracy

Prof. Yurij Castelfranchi

Dept. of Sociology

Faculty of Phil. and Human Sciences

Federal University of Minas Gerais

(UFMG)

[email protected]

Page 2: Hacker Politics

Summary

Contemporary relationship between technology, knowledge

production and democracy

Conditions of possibility for an erosion of technocracy and a

crisis of legitimization of representative democracy: cybernetic

markets and cybernetic governmentality

Forms of political action and resistance: “insistence”, “de-

existence”(not with the meaning of “giving up”)

Political and epistemological “hacking” in a politics of

immanence: inventing rights, recombining codes

Page 3: Hacker Politics

The Pedophile and the Truth:

Aspects of technocracy

Kyoto and George Bush

Greenpeace and High-speed rail

Abortion and the Vatican

….

Page 4: Hacker Politics

Classical Technocracy:

Policy depoliticized

Science-based decision-making and evidence-based policy

whenever technical arguments are possible

In situation of risk (social, technological, environmental) or

uncertainty, policies tend to legitimate itself based on scientific and

technical expertise

Rhetoric of progress: technical innovation seen as necessary

and\or sufficient for social and economic progress: “future at

stake”, “the train we can not lose”...

Scientists not as engaged intellectuals, but as neutral experts:

spokespersons of “facts”, producers of answers. Science is

spokesperson of Nature: a “silencing machine” (Stengers)

Page 5: Hacker Politics

Classical Technocracy:

Policy depoliticized

Publics seen as “lay public”: deficit of competences to decide on

technical problems... And technical problems are a major part of

political problems...

Conflictive or antagonist voices tend to be silenced by classical

mechanisms of discourse rejection based on the place of truth and

reason: they are depicted as either “irrational”

“obscurantist”, “hysterical” (non-reason) or as

“ideological”, “corrupt” (non-truth)

Page 6: Hacker Politics

“Regulatory science” (Jasanoff , 1995)

“Post-normal” science (Funtowicz & Ravetz, 1993)

“Mode 2” of knowledge production (Gibbons, Nowotny, et al 1994, 2001)

“Post-academic” science by Ziman (2000)

Neuralgias of technoscience

Page 7: Hacker Politics

Post-Normal Science

(Funtowicz e Ravetz)

Page 8: Hacker Politics

“Post-academic Science” (Ziman)

Post-Academic

InstrumentalPre-instrumentalNon-instrumental

Government Labs

Research Councils

Foundations

1900

1950

2000

Universities

Academic

Pure

‘Mode 1’ ‘Mode 2’

Post-industrialStrategic

Applied

Industries

Industrial

Basic

Page 9: Hacker Politics

Neuralgias of technocracy: in a politics

of immanence... Knowledge is political

If policy and politics are science-based and legitimated

through expertise, experts are seen as political, and as

stakeholders with

In most technoscientific problems and conflicts, no

single technoscientific answer or solution exists, for two

reasons....

Page 10: Hacker Politics

Erosion of technocracy

• 1. Complex systems and uncertainty:

• Knowledge

• Controversies

• Complexity

• Often, risk is not measurable (uncertainty: we do not know what

we do not know)

WE DO NOT KNOW

HAVING DATA AND A THEORY

DOES NOT MEAN YOU CAN

CONTROL

OR FORESEE

MORE THAN 1 MODEL, OR

ALTERNATIVE

THEORIES (poliphonic expertise)

Page 11: Hacker Politics

• 2. Social definition of risk

Even when we can estimate risks, damages and

externalities, social acceptability of risk is not the same than

its numerical estimates

S&T neither sufficient for a politically relevant definition of risk

nor to legitimate policies

Erosion of technocracy

John Gummer: “beef eater”

Page 12: Hacker Politics
Page 13: Hacker Politics
Page 14: Hacker Politics

Erosion of technocracy

Despoliticization of decision making

(tecnhocracy)

Politicization of science

and expertise

Crisis of representative

democracy and “bottom-up”

rhetoric (especially in

neoliberalism)

Page 15: Hacker Politics

S&T and democracy today

Science and Technology linked to (old and) new political

conflicts: risk society and “acting in an uncertain world”; ethics;

Intellectual Property Rights and commercialization of knowledge,

etc.

Science and technology opening up new spaces for citizen

action

Knowledge as a realm of politics (re-politization of S&T)

Struggle over participation and “technical democracy”: people

feeling excluded from technical decision, while so much part of

decision-making is de-politicized as being “technical”

Page 16: Hacker Politics

Effects (and affects)

Erosion of technocracy

Midiatization of politics

Financeirization of global economy

Effect 1: cybernetic high-frequency

markets, cybernetic governments:

fluxes and feedbacks are crucial

Effect 2: crisis of legitimization of a

democracy kidnapped by financial

markets

Conditions of possibility for positive

loops and explosive feedbacks,

exponentially amplifying the effects

and affects of individual or collective

actions, both political and sub-

political: boycotts, media campaigns,

direct action, civil disobedience…

More powerful forms of “insistence”

and “de-existence”

Page 17: Hacker Politics

2 questions, 2 issues

What resistence and struggle become in a context of

neoliberal subjects and subaltern communities

Citizenship as a form of power

“Technoscientific citizenship”

Political aspects: re-politicizing

technology (and politics itself)

Resistance

“In-sistence”

(“De-existence”: not in the

sens of “giving up”)

Page 18: Hacker Politics

What resistence and struggle become in a context of

neoliberal subjects and subaltern communities?

Neoliberal subjectivities, precarization, etc. tend to

generate movements and riots in which individuals, and

multitudes, play important role. Individual and collective

actions, not as workers, but as a

consumers, voters, parents, may have strong impact on

politics, market and labor itself

Page 19: Hacker Politics

TACTICS AND RESISTANCE

By solving problems, deciding the goods they buy, the

politicians they vote for, downloading music, enjoying their

leisure time or figuring out how to cope with goals they

need to achieve within the moral, legal or technological

constraints they live in, consumers can act as producers

or inventors.

Environmental or patient groups may produce new scientific

data, or pose new constraints or challenges both to

methods and organization of science.

Empirical evidence is great that tactics and micropolitics can

have effects and contribute for recombination in

technology and policies (Epstein , 1995; Wynne, 1996;

Callon et al., 2009).

Page 20: Hacker Politics

TACTICS AND RESISTANCE

• Experiments in public participation and deliberative decision

making in S&T show their limitations, while planned and

performed in a liberal framework of rules and expectative,

but also show the great potential to constitute an interesting

setting for mutual, collective learning, in which scientist,

engineers and technocrats learn together, in a conflictive

situation, and open up the menu of problems to be take on

into account: in this context, “efficiency” is politically

contested and redefined thanks to needs, questions, but

also data and knowledge coming from diverse social groups.

Page 21: Hacker Politics

TACTICS AND RESISTANCE

• Situated knowledge, practices and conflicts people enact

contribute to transform policies, as well as processes of

diffusion, regulation and governance of S&T eventually

generating or empowering processes that modify

epistemological and methodological aspects of technology,

(that´s what we call “innovating innovation”).

Page 22: Hacker Politics

What is “Citizenship”

NOT ONLY a set of practices or attributes of the individual

NOT ONLY a list of rights and duties

Being a capacity to act in a framework of constraints, we

can treat citizenship as a particular kind of power: not simply

something one can have, conquer or lose, not a substance or

attribute “inside” the individual, but also a dynamic relationship

modulated by subjects that are constrained by strategies,

norms, environmental limitations or possibilities.

Page 23: Hacker Politics

What is “Citizenship”

If a citizen is not simply equipped with rights and duty, if he/she

performs and practices citizenship through tactics and

interactions, than citizenship is not merely about guaranteeing or

conquering rights. It is also a conflictive field of invention of rights:

a territory in which rights that did not exist are invented or

redefined within contested boundaries.

In this sense, duties and rights are the consequence of agency

and citizenship, not only its conditions of possibility.

Page 24: Hacker Politics

Is technical citizenship possible?

People may contribute, by figuring out what to do, by

buying, using, voting, desiring different things, to transform

technology and modulate markets or policies.

They can re-signify or reinvent technical objects or

processes, opening bifurcations that can be territorialized in

different ways.

Such processes are usually not organized or planned, but

may lead to changes in technoscience, in some cases, when a

loop or affinity occurs between goals and effects at this level

and ruptures or condition of possibilities in the macro level.

Page 25: Hacker Politics

Insistence

We prefer here to distinguish resistance from “insistence”.

Socialist workers‟ parties, social movements in the „70s, contra-

culture “resisted” to power, ideology, oppression or hegemony as

victims of a domination: when you resist to something or

someone, you can “name the enemy”.

As feminism showed, we are all legitimate or illegitimate sons and

daughters of our world, impure witnesses, whose eyes are not

innocent. We are an active part of our world, not an

external, innocent victim. In this perspective, political action is

complicated: no moral or epistemological privileged point of view

exist.

Other possibilities and potentialities of resistance exist.

Page 26: Hacker Politics

Insistence

“Insistence”: a hacker politics, in which we do not see

technology, capitalism and domination as above us, or external.

We live inside the political and technological blackboxes we try to

open.

If we live inside them, conceptual and epistemological hacking

(and recoding) as well as political hacking (and recombination)

can be seen as concrete possibilities for political action.

Page 27: Hacker Politics

Insistence

Insistence is a change of perspective, in which we accept the

impurity, discomfort, complication and responsibility of being part

of a totality and try to invent bottom-up actions eventually capable

of loops and feedback with potentialities and ambiguities at the

macro level.

Thinking all this at the level of work and labour may be important:

workers have to fight to change power relationships (“take the

power”)…

But can also transform reality inside-out and bottom-up

Page 28: Hacker Politics

Conclusive remarks

In a politics of immanence, hacker politics may be very

effective

Epistemological hacking contributes to the invention of rights

Political hacking and insistence contribute to recombine codes

Recombination may lead to disruptive innovation (innovation of

innovation): the construction of new technical and political codes

in which what changes is NOT the impact (of policy, or

technology) but power relationships (who is in control of what)

Page 29: Hacker Politics

Thank you

Contact

[email protected]