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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Compromised Agency: The Case of BabyLegs

Engaging Science Technology and Society 2017 33 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron

Summary

This paper examined the concept of 'compromised agency' through the case of BabyLegs — a citizen science monitoring tool for marine microplastics — highlighting how asymmetrical power relations constrain the ability of grassroots science to challenge dominant environmental narratives. The study contributes to science and technology studies around citizen involvement in environmental monitoring.

The concept of agency is ubiquitous in STS, particularly regarding cases of alternative ways of knowing and doing science such as civic, citizen, and feminist sciences, among others. Yet the focus on agency often glosses over the constraints placed on agents, particularly within asymmetrical power relations. This article follows the case of BabyLegs, a do-it-yourself monitoring tool for marine microplastic pollution, and the attempt to keep the technology open source within an intellectual property (IP) system set up to privatize it. The tactics used to design BabyLegs as a feminine, silly, doll-tool to discredit the device in the eyes of an IP system that valued traditional gender roles lead to the eventual success of keeping the device open source. Yet, those same tactics also reinforced and reproduced the structures of power and essentialism they were designed to resist. I characterize this technological ambivalence as compromise, and argue that all agency exercised within asymmetrical power relations is compromised. This is not to say resistance is futile, but that agency is never pure, and this recognition lets us be more intentional in how we might compromise as practitioners of diverse scientific knowledges.

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