Things I finished reading in February 2022:
Books and dissertations
- Carter, Kristi, and James Brunton, eds. TransNarratives: Scholarly and Creative Works on Transgender Experience. Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2021.
- Dhejne, Cecilia. On gender dysphoria. Diss. Karolinska Institutet (Sweden), 2017.
- Hanemaayer, Ariane. The impossible clinic: a critical sociology of evidence-based medicine. UBC Press, 2019.
- Hanssmann, Christoph. Care in transit: The political and clinical emergence of trans health. Diss. UCSF, 2017.
- Green, Jamison. Becoming a visible man. Vanderbilt University Press, 2020.
- Guyan, Kevin. Queer Data: Using Gender, Sex and Sexuality Data for Action. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2022.
- Hausman, Bernice L. Changing sex. Duke University Press, 1995.
- Hill, Darryl B. Trans Toronto: An Oral History. William Rodney Press, 2012.
- Irving, Dan, and Rupert Raj, eds. Trans activism in Canada: A reader. Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2014.
- Kane-Demaios, J. Ari, ed. Crossing sexual boundaries: Transgender journeys, uncharted paths. Prometheus Books, 2010.
- Kotula, Dean. The phallus palace: Female to male transsexuals. Alyson Books, 2002.
- May, Todd. Between genealogy and epistemology. Penn State University Press, 2021.
- Miles, Laura. Transgender Resistance: Socialism and the Fight for Trans Liberation. Bookmarks Publications, 2020.
- Prosser, Jay. Second skins: The body narratives of transsexuality. Columbia University Press, 1998.
- Sharpe, Andrew N. Transgender jurisprudence: Dysphoric bodies of law. Cavendish Publishing, 2002.
- Simon, Bart. Undead Science. Rutgers University Press, 2002.
- Smith, Martin J. Going to Trinidad. Bower House, 2021.
- Sullivan, Lou. We Both Laughed in Pleasure: The Selected Diaries of Lou Sullivan, 1961-1991. Nightboat Books, 2019.
- Tosh, Jemma. Perverse psychology: The pathologization of sexual violence and transgenderism. Routledge, 2014.
- Tosh, Jemma. Psychology and gender dysphoria: Feminist and transgender perspectives. Routledge, 2016.
- Tosh, Jemma. The body and consent in psychology, psychiatry, and medicine: A therapeutic rape culture. Routledge, 2019.
- Waldman, Ari Ezra. Privacy as trust: Information privacy for an information age. Cambridge University Press, 2018.
- Wilchins, Riki. TRANS/gressive. Riverdale Avenue Books LLC, 2017.
- Winters, Kelley. Gender madness in American psychiatry: Essays from the struggle for dignity. GID Reform Advocates, 2008.
Papers and Chapters
- Amoore, Louise. “Machine learning political orders.” Review of International Studies (2022): 1-17.
- Boublil, Elodie. “The ethics of vulnerability and the phenomenology of interdependency.” Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 49.3 (2018): 183-192.
- Calcagno, Antonio. “On the vulnerability of a community: Edith Stein and Gerda Walther.” Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 49.3 (2018): 255-266.
- Casper, Monica J., and Adele E. Clarke. “Making the Pap smear into the ‘right tool’ for the job: cervical cancer screening in the USA, circa 1940-1995.” Social Studies of Science 28.2 (1998): 255-290.
- Collins, Harry M. “The place of the ‘core-set’in modern science: social contingency with methodological propriety in science.” History of science 19.1 (1981): 6-19.
- Collins, Harry M. “Surviving closure: Post-rejection adaptation and plurality in science.” American Sociological Review (2000): 824-845.
- Delborne, Jason A. “Transgenes and transgressions: Scientific dissent as heterogeneous practice.” Social studies of science 38.4 (2008): 509-541.
- Dupré, John, and Sabina Leonelli. “Process epistemology in the COVID-19 Era: Rethinking the research process to avoid dangerous forms of reification.” European Journal for the Philosophy of Science (2022).
- Engel, Nora, and Ragna Zeiss. “Situating standards in practices: Multi drug-resistant tuberculosis treatment in India.” Science as Culture 23.2 (2014): 201-225.
- Fox, Nick J., and Pam Alldred. “Inside the research-assemblage: New materialism and the micropolitics of social inquiry.” Sociological Research Online 20.2 (2015): 122-140.
- Freudenburg, William R., Robert Gramling, and Debra J. Davidson. “Scientific certainty argumentation methods (SCAMs): science and the politics of doubt.” Sociological Inquiry 78.1 (2008): 2-38.
- Gabriel, Iason “Towards a Theory of Justice for Artificial Intelligence.” Daedalus (2022).
- Gillespie, Dair L., and Ann Leffler. “The politics of research methodology in claims-making activities: Social science and sexual harassment.” Social Problems 34.5 (1987): 490-501.
- Gilson, Erinn Cunniff. “Beyond bounded selves and places: The relational making of vulnerability and security.” Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 49.3 (2018): 229-242.
- Jones, Karen. “Trust, distrust, and affective looping.” Philosophical studies 176.4 (2019): 955-968.
- Kahan, Benjamin. “The unexpected American origins of sexology and sexual science: Elizabeth Osgood Goodrich Willard, Orson Squire Fowler, and the scientification of sex.” History of the Human Sciences 34.1 (2021): 71-88.
- Lawlor, Leonard. “Vulnerability and Violence: On the Poverty of the Remainder (or Beyond Kant).” Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 49.3 (2018): 217-228.
- Mackenzie, Catriona. “Vulnerability, Insecurity and the Pathologies of Trust and Distrust.” International Journal of Philosophical Studies 28.5 (2020): 624-643.
- Majone, Giandomenico. “Science and trans-science in standard setting.” Science, Technology, & Human Values 9.1 (1984): 15-22.
- Marsh, Gerald. “Trust, testimony, and prejudice in the credibility economy.” Hypatia 26.2 (2011): 280-293.
- McDermott, Monica, and Frank L. Samson. “White racial and ethnic identity in the United States.” Annual. Review of Sociology. 31 (2005): 245-261.
- Michael, Mike, and Lynda Birke. “Enrolling the core set: The case of the animal experimentation controversy.” Social Studies of Science 24.1 (1994): 81-95.
- Nordfalk, Francisca. “The Mutual Enablement of Research Data and Care: How Newborn Babies Become a National Research Population.” Science & Technology Studies (2021).
- Pendse, Sachin R., et al. “From Treatment to Healing: Envisioning a Decolonial Digital Mental Health.” CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI’22). 2022.
- Rayner, Steve. “Uncomfortable knowledge: the social construction of ignorance in science and environmental policy discourses.” Economy and Society 41.1 (2012): 107-125.
- Richards, Evelleen. “The politics of therapeutic evaluation: the vitamin C and cancer controversy.” Social Studies of Science 18.4 (1988): 653-701.
- Richards, Neil, and Woodrow Hartzog. “A Relational Turn for Data Protection?.” European Data Protection Law Review 4 (2020): 1-3.
- Rivest, Marie-Pier. “When Lay Knowledge is a Symptom: The Uses of Insight in Psychiatric Interventions.” Studies in Social Justice 16.1 (2022): 245-263.
- Scott, Wilbur J. “PTSD in DSM-III: A case in the politics of diagnosis and disease.” Social problems 37.3 (1990): 294-310.
- Solow-Niederman, Alicia. “Information Privacy and the Inference Economy.” Northwestern University Law Review (2022).
- Tabb, Kathryn, and Maël Lemoine. “The prospects of precision psychiatry.” Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics (2022): 1-18.
- Thibodeaux, Jarrett. “Three versions of constructionism and their reliance on social conditions in social problems research.” Sociology 48.4 (2014): 829-837.
- Tosh, Jemma. “‘Zuck Off’! A commentary on the protest against Ken Zucker and his ‘treatment’of Childhood Gender Identity Disorder.” Psychology of Women Section Review 13.1 (2011): 10-16.
- Tuck, Eve. “Suspending damage: A letter to communities.” Harvard Educational Review 79.3 (2009): 409-428.
- Tutenel, Piet, and Ann Heylighen. “Interweaving vulnerability and everyday design: Encounters around an aquarium in a paediatric oncology ward.” Design Studies 73 (2021): 101004.
- Weinberg, Alvin M. “Science and trans-science.” Science 177.4045 (1972): 211-211.
- Weiss, Gail. “Intertwined Identities: challenges to bodily autonomy.” Perspectives: International Postgraduate Journal of Philosophy 2.1 (2009): 22-37.
- Wynne, Brian. “Misunderstood misunderstanding: social identities and public uptake of science.” Public understanding of science 1.3 (1992): 281.