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The agro-food sector is seeing a tidal wave of innovation. With the backing of venture capital, scientists cum entrepreneurs are deploying new techniques in synthetic biology, tissue engineering, digitalization, robotics, and other fields, with the aim of both improving upon and disrupting farming and food production. As STS and other scholars have pointed out, much of the financial investment is speculative and the technologies promissory, operating with loads of uncertainty regarding their potential to “scale up” and be accepted by the public much less address the environmental, societal and other problems they aim to solve. Papers selected for this open call will draw on case study material to build upon these emergent critiques. We are particularly interested in papers that cross fertilize questions and concerns from STS, such as public acceptance of technology, with those of food studies, such as the exceptionalism of food and agriculture. More pointedly, we ask how and to what extent do food and farm tech entrepreneurs engage the specificity of food and farming as organic, biological processes uniquely laden with cultural meaning in their dreams to meet what they see as compelling needs in Anthropocene futures.
Food Is Not Code: The Tech Sector Meets Agri-Food Exceptionalism - Kathryn Teigen De Master, University of California, Berkeley; Charlotte Biltekoff, UC Davis; Julie Guthman, University of California, Santa Cruz
Agrarian Dreams for Salmon Aquaculture - Sarah Martin, Memorial University, Canada; Charlie Mather, Department of Geography, Memorial University; Christine Knott, Memorial University, Canada; Dean Bavington, Memorial University, Canada
Feeding the World through Vertical Farming: Potentials, Prophecies and Pitfalls of a High-Tech Solution in the Food Industry - Mascha Gugganig, Technical University Munich
Platforms of Plenty? Data Imaginaries in U.S. Agriculture - Susanne Freidberg, Dartmouth College