|
|
|
Tracés, hors-série 2019
Les sciences humaines et sociales au travail (II): Que faire des données de la recherche ?
Tracés
Social sciences and humanities at work (II): The politics of research data
The past few years have witnessed the multiplication of seminars, conferences and training sessions devoted to "research data" as well as the development of new infrastructures and the allocation of new financial means to manage them. In line with new policies geared towards "open science" and the “replicability” of research, the current movement for open data enjoins researchers to archive the data they produce and make them available to the public. At the same time, new regulations have emerged regarding the protection of personal data, which reinforce the administrative and bureaucratic constraints that weight upon field research, especially for those working on so-called “sensitive” topics. Finally, the rise of digital surveillance poses unprecedented ethical and technical challenges to researchers willing to secure their data and protect the anonymity of their interviewees. These recent developments place research data at the heart of major political and scientific issues. Faced with a number of contradictory injunctions (protecting data, making them available), researchers have engaged in controversies and debates. Given the many questions and concerns that the current “data moment” provokes, this special issue proposes to take a step back and reflect on our trade and practices: what are data really? What is their role in the work of human and social sciences? What are we (researchers and research personnel) meant to do with such data? And what does the current “data moment” tell us about the changing economics of science? The articles of this special issue make a first contribution to a reflection that must primarily be collective.
Éditorial des revues en lutte
Sciences en danger, revues en lutte
Par le Collectif des revues en lutte et Camille Noûs
Éditorial
Ouvrir les données de la recherche ?
Par Juliette Galonnier, Stefan Le Courant, Anthony Pecqueux et Camille Noûs
Articles
Ouverture des données de la recherche : les mutations juridiques récentes
Par Anne-Laure Stérin et Camille Noûs
Données de la recherche hier et aujourd'hui : pour une histoire politique du travail en sciences humaines et sociales
Par Christelle Rabier et Camille Noûs
Fabriquer un corpus de données en analyse de conversation. Fondements théoriques, enjeux réflexifs et pratiques collectives
Par Alexandra Ortiz Caria et Camille Noûs
Apories de la mise en banque : retour d'expérience sur la réutilisation d'enquêtes qualitatives
Par Sophie Duchesne et Camille Noûs
Données à penser. Enjeux pratiques et éthiques autour des données dans le montage de projets de recherche européens
Par Delphine Cavallo et Camille Noûs
Vers une neutralisation juridique et bureaucratique des recherches sur des sujets sensibles ?
Par Marwan Mohammed et Camille Noûs
Les chercheurs face à la surveillance d'État : état des lieux et contre-mesures
Par Félix Tréguer et Camille Noûs
Le son donné. Une fabrique archivistique
Par Séverine Janssen et Camille Noûs
Entretiens
Le travail des données. Entretien autour du service des enquêtes de l'INED
Propos recueillis et présentés par Juliette Galonnier, Stefan Le Courant et Camille Noûs
Archiver, documenter, enquêter sur l'enquête qualitative. Le travail de l’ombre de beQuali
Propos recueillis et présentés par Stefan Le Courant, Anthony Pecqueux et Camille Noûs
Juliette Galonnier
: 15811857X
Anthony Favier, Yannick Fer, Juliette Galonnier, Ana Perrin-Heredia
Sociétés, Espaces, Temps
This volume proposes to examine anew a classic but largely neglected question in the social sciences: that of the articulation between religions and social classes. The eleven surveys brought together here bring it up to date and analyze its role in the construction of social boundaries as well as in the reproduction or questioning of inequalities
Contributions:
Thomas Angeletti, Juliette Galonnier, Manon Him-Aquili
This issue of Tracés revisits the classic question of the social life of words and seeks to understand how the appearance of a term and its various potential meanings are socially produced and reproduced. it looks at the controversies surrounding the meaning of words and what they reveal about our societies and the functioning of language.
Thomas Angeletti, Quentin Deluermoz, Juliette Galonnier
What is an epoch ? How to decide where one starts and ends ? What are we the contemporaries of ? And what are the consequences of periodizing attempts on our relationship to time and history ? This special issue of Tracés is precisely dedicated to these questions. This special issue shows the multiple ways to conceive an epoch
|
|