STS Circle at Harvard
[cid:[email protected]]
Anna M. Agathangelou
York University, Political Science

on

Emerging Legal and Forensic BioConstitutional Order(s) in Post-Conflict Cyprus

Monday, April 6
12:15-2:00 pm
K262, the Bowie-Vernon Room, Knafel Building, CGIS, 1737 Cambridge Street

[cid:[email protected]]

Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP via our 
online<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1HbdY3j1fVcUeE-UqQ7pN5clAxQtaQX7Ux6Y0tRMM9E8/viewform>
 
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 before Thursday morning, April 2.

Abstract:   The engineering and co-emergence of life and value, bodies and the 
body politic is a major aspect of world politics today. I conjunct two sites, 
that is the court and the forensic lab, in Cyprus and the EU, to survey and 
explore their co-production. Focusing on a Cypriot legal case of a ‘missing’ 
soldier of the 1974 war in Cyprus who was exhumed and identified in 2005 via 
both the domestic and the European court, I trace how and what socio-technical 
imaginaries (Jasanoff) make their way into the legal and social order in order 
to show their effect on the emergence of a bioconstitutional order. Using the 
exhumation and the identification of the corpse project as muse, this 
presentation considers how humans are actively engineering a bioconstitutional 
order, creating the conditions for contemporary and future governance.  This 
new engineering of the bioconstitutional order projects a future for STS 
devoted to engaging life sciences (i.e., the lively world of capital).

Biography:  Agathangelou is a Fellow with the Program on Science, Technology 
and Society at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. 
She teaches Political Science and is a member of Institute and Science and 
Technology at York University. She is also the co-founder and co-organizer of 
the section on Art, Science and Technology (STAIR), International Studies 
Association (March 2014).She is working on a book, informed by three years of 
participant-observation in the courts and forensic labs in Cyprus about the 
co-production of law and science around the humanitarian issue of the “missing” 
post-conflict. She is the author of the Global Political Economy of Sex: 
Desire, Violence and Insecurity in Mediterranean Nation-States 
(Palgrave/Macmillan, 2004); co-author with L.H.M. Ling of Transforming World 
Politics: From Empire to Multiple Worlds (Routledge, 2009); co-editor with 
Nevzat Soguk of Arab Revolutions and World Transfromations (Routledge, 2013) 
and co-editor with Kyle D. Killian (2015) Time, Temporality, and Violence in 
International Relations: (De) Fatalizing the Present, Forging Radical 
Alternatives.  Routledge




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