Ayo Wahlberg
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ayowahlberg.bsky.social
Ayo Wahlberg
@ayowahlberg.bsky.social

Cartographer of historically and ethnographically situated modes of problematisation. Out now: Viral Loads https://bit.ly/302vCxJ, Good Quality http://bit.ly/2NFH1by
https://researchprofiles.ku.dk/en/persons/ayo-wahlberg

Biology 21%
Philosophy 16%

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

Pleased to share this paper for BioSocieties on snakebite in Kerala. I explore how social scientific theories of toxicity aid in conceiving of the structural vulnerabilities, diagnostic uncertainty, and multispecies health impacts that characterise snakebite's public health response.
Making sense of snakebite: the place of biological toxins in social scientific analyses of toxicity - BioSocieties
Through an ethnographic study of snakebite governance in Kerala, India, this article argues that social scientific theories of toxicity elucidate the biosocial dimensions of snakebite envenomation (SB...
link.springer.com

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

Looking for sociologists & STS scholars (science & technology studies) to join us for 2 yrs of fully funded research at RWTH, one of Europe’s top technical universities.

Deadline: Oct 5, 2025 | Start latest Mar 2026

www.rwth-aachen.de/go/id/botjje...
Open Call: RWTH ”Port to Europe” Postdoc Fellowship | RWTH Aachen University | EN
RWTH Aachen University invites early-career researchers from outside the European Union to conduct their next research project at an institution where academic freedom, reliable long-term funding, and European culture and values come together.
www.rwth-aachen.de

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

ICYMI: 'Doing Bodies in YouTube Videos about Contested Illnesses'; Irene Groenevelt, Sanneke de Haan and Jenny Slatman research Dutch women who use YouTube as a medium to document their contested illness experiences. (Open Access) journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10....
Doing Bodies in YouTube Videos about Contested Illnesses - Irene Groenevelt, Sanneke de Haan, Jenny Slatman, 2022
This article is based on an online ethnographic study of Dutch women who use YouTube as a medium to document their contested illness experiences. During 13 mont...
journals.sagepub.com

Must read, open access, couldn't be more timely! "The New Reproductive Order: Technology, Fertility, and Social Change around the Globe" edited by Sarah Franklin and Marcia Inhorn
opensquare.nyupress.org/books/978147...
The New Reproductive Order: Technology, Fertility, and Social Change around the Globe
[Open Access] The transformative impact of new reproductive technologies over the past half centuryBoth fertility and infertility are commonly depicted as individual, biological, and choice dependent ...
opensquare.nyupress.org

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

Great news, the programme for our Forum next week is now live! Take a look here 👇
www.repro.cam.ac.uk/events/male-...
Not registered yet? There's still time, sign up on Eventbrite and we'll see you there!
www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/the-male-f...

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

🚨JOBS
Interested in #STS research on pharmaceutical innovation and microbial biopolitics?

2 position available @stsvienna.bsky.social to work with me on my @erc.europa.eu ERC Project #ALTERBIOTIC:

PhD: jobs.univie.ac.at/job/PhD-posi...

POSTDOC: jobs.univie.ac.at/job/Postdoc-...
Postdoc position for the ERC project ALTERBIOTIC
Postdoc position for the ERC project ALTERBIOTIC
jobs.univie.ac.at

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

How can technologists better serve civil society? What kinds of training do they need, and how can they serve respectfully? How can civil society organizations benefit from technologists and critical tech perspectives? Join us for our May 20th webinar! stpp.fordschool.umich.edu/event/2025/w...

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

Join us to help develop recommendations to improve how "failure" is understood and experienced in HE!

We want to hear from academic researchers at ANY career stage - PhDs all the way to established professors - in ANY department or discipline.

*Please re-post to your networks!*

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

We're looking forward to hearing from Aimee Middlemiss next Weds on personhood, pregnancy loss and the politics of death for the third in our series of free, online #deathstudies events.

Book here. deathandsociety.org/etn/death-si...

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

After 20 yrs, @biosocieties.bsky.social founding editor and global thought leader, Prof @rose-nikolas.bsky.social, steps down from his active editorial role. We reflect on this significant transition in the journal's history and pay tribute to him. biosocieties.org/our-thanks-t...
Our Thanks to Founding Editor Professor Nikolas Rose
As BioSocieties reaches its twentieth year we write to mark a significant transition in our history. Professor Nikolas Rose, founding editor and global leader
biosocieties.org

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

“The New Reproductive Order” is out today! Edited by Sarah Franklin and Marcia C. Inhorn, this volume explores the transformative impact of new reproductive technologies over the past half century.

Groundbreaking and sophisticated, this collection of essays opens new horizons of scholarship.
The New Reproductive Order
The transformative impact of new reproductive technologies over the past half centuryBoth fertility and infertility are commonly depicted as individual, biol...
buff.ly

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

Medicine on a Larger Scale: Global Histories of Social Medicine, eds @ahlie.bsky.social, Jeremy Greene, and me, will be available open access from @cambridgeup.bsky.social in May 2025. In a world of growing health inequity, radical social medicine has never been more urgent!
#histstm #histmed #sts
Medicine on a Larger Scale
Cambridge Core - History of Medicine - Medicine on a Larger Scale
www.cambridge.org

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

Welcome! BioSocieties is an international, interdisciplinary journal for social studies of life sciences. Founded 19 years ago, it is just as relevant today.

@biosocieties.bsky.social and @biosocieties on X, where we post our issue publications and repost when tagged.

Reposted by Ayo Wahlberg

My new book will be out in Spring:
It examines ecosyndemics through the lens of Planetary Health: