Datum
15. September 2026
Panel at at the European Association for the Study of Science and Technology (EASST) conference in Krakow
CfP for “Caring for the Possible: In the Meantime of Healthcare’s Data-Driven Futures”
Panel at the European Association for the Study of Science and Technology (EASST) conference in Krakow
September 2026.
The deadline for abstract submissions is 28 February 2026. Please see below for more information and submit your abstract here: https://easst.net/conference/easst2026/call-for-abstracts/
P178: Caring for the Possible: In the Meantime of Healthcare’s Data-Driven Futures
Short Abstract
What happens to the promissory utopias of data-driven healthcare “in the meantime”? This panel reinvigorates STS approaches to healthcare data and temporality through Masquelier & Durham’s anthropology of the possible, tracing how waiting, delay, reframing and repair shape care.
Description
In contemporary healthcare, data are routinely invoked as instruments for prediction, control and revolutionary transformation, promising more personalised, efficient, and evidence-based care. Yet between the aspirational and the actual lies what Masquelier and Durham (2023) call the meantime: the indeterminate, affective, and open-ended space in which possible futures are continually negotiated. Drawing on their invitation to an anthropology of the possible, this panel reinvigorates the ways STS engages empirically with data practices that are neither fully realised nor entirely speculative.
Drawing on empirical research in social studies of medicine, healthcare and clinical data infrastructures, we explore the forms of waiting, adjustment, and improvisation characterising everyday work with data. These ‘meantime practices’ include the crafting of incomplete datasets, the maintenance of fragile and sometimes fictional interoperability, and the affective labours of care that make such systems function. Rather than treating data as stable intermediaries or precursors to predictive futures, we approach them as sites where the possible is continually refigured — through moments of suspension, hesitation, and repair.
Bringing Masquelier and Durham’s anthropology of the possible into dialogue with feminist STS and social studies of data, we explore the conceptual and methodological openings for studying healthcare data as a terrain of ongoing possibility. Such an approach invites us to notice not only what data are promised to deliver, but also what they hold open — in the meantime — about how futures of health, care, and evidence might be made otherwise. We invite papers that consider data practices and care in ‘the meantime’, engaging questions such as:
– What novel modes of attention become possible when ‘the meantime’ of data practices is our focus?
– What sorts of ‘meantimes’, of different temporalities, exist among data practices?
– How do ‘data meantimes’ shape our understandings of the past and possibilities for the future of care?