Chemistry in Transition
‘Chemistry provides bread, prosperity, beauty.’
The ideological promises and actual achievements of fossil-fuel-based modern societies are manifested in people’s expectations, desires, beliefs, and behavioural patterns. These factors could prove to be the ‘hardest’ and most difficult to change in the ongoing transformation processes.
Transformation processes require changes in people’s minds, not just a change in technology. As specialists in ‘soft’ factors, we examine the historical, socio-economic and spatial conditions and impacts of the chemical industry in central Germany in order to understand and help shape the transition to a climate-friendly society in the course of a ‘just transition.’
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We combine approaches and methods from geography, ethnology, cultural and media studies, philosophy, history of technology, science theory, art and design. In doing so, we analyse the cultural practices, emotions, beliefs, motivations and needs of people associated with the chemical industry: those who work in the chemical industry and those who consume – or fear – its products. Our collaborative transfer formats are aimed at economic, political and civil society actors. Chemistry in transition does not only embody industry or science; it must be thought of as a culturally anchored dispositif: as landscape, lifeworld, infrastructure, aesthetics, knowledge order, organisational and production principle. As part of a social metabolism.
Team
Dr. Alexander Klose, Team Leader
Sophie Altmiks
Jürgen Viet Anh Höpfel
Daniel Wolter, Ph.D.
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Introduction to Legal Tech
Whether you are interested in technology or simply curious, here you will find inspiration, knowledge and a glimpse into the future of law. Come along and find out how you can help shape the legal world of tomorrow with legal tech!
Halle/Saale, Sachsen-Anhalt 06108 Germany
Peer-Workshop: Knowledge transfer – for whom?
At universities and in research funding guidelines, there is a growing expectation that transfer-oriented projects generate societal impact, although the concrete mediation of scientific and practice-related requirements remains unclear. This interdisciplinary workshop offers participants a space to reflect on existing transfer activities, their challenges, and potential contributions to societal change.
Halle (Saale), 06108 Germany
