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Science, Technology & Human Values
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Technology Assessment as Learning

John Grin

University of Amsterdam

Henk van de Graaf

University of Amsterdam

This article addresses the question of how policymakers could deliberately influence processes of technology development. Using the development of wind turbines in Denmark as an example, the article describes the frames of meaning guiding the actions of those involved in the three subprocesses of policymaking, the generation of new technologies, and the management of the firms that bring new artifacts to the market. The three types of actors share an interest in one notion: the meaning of a technological artifact. This notion, however, plays a different role in the respective frames of meaning of the actors. For policymakers and managers, it is an instrumental notion. For technologists, it provides guidance to their activities. The shared interest affords the possibility of reaching common action with only congruent (not necessarily shared) meanings. Interactive forms of technology assessment can play a central role in bringing about such congruent meanings and thus in influencing the generation of new technologies.

Science, Technology & Human Values, Vol. 21, No. 1, 72-99 (1996)
DOI: 10.1177/016224399602100104


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C. Marris, P.-B. Joly, and A. Rip
Interactive Technology Assessment in the Real World: Dual Dynamics in an iTA Exercise on Genetically Modified Vines
Science Technology Human Values, January 1, 2008; 33(1): 77 - 100.
[Abstract] [PDF]