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People

Erik Fisher
Assistant Director of International Activities, CNS-ASU
Assistant Professor, School of Government, Politics and Global Studies and CSPO
Erik
Fisher is principle investigator of the Socio-Technical Integration Research
project (STIR; NSF #0849101), assistant director of
international activities at the Center for Nanotechnology in Society (CNS;
NSF #0531194), and assistant professor in the School of Government, Politics,
and Global Studies at Arizona State University. Fisher
has a joint appointment at the Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes
(CSPO) and leads a Real-time Technology Assessment research thrust for CNS.
Fisher studies the multi-level governance of emerging technologies,
spanning the nested chains of agency from “lab to legislature.”
He developed the collaborative, interdisciplinary approach of Midstream
Modulation to help understand how social and ethical aspects of science and
engineering decision-making may be broadened. His
approach is being employed in over twenty laboratories on three continents
as part of the STIR project. Fisher’s work has
appeared in journals such as Science and Public Policy, Technology
in Society, and NanoEthics and he is editor (with Cynthia
Selin and Jameson Wetmore) of The Yearbook of Nanotechnology
in Society, Volume 1: Presenting Futures (Springer 2008).
Previously at the University of Colorado at Boulder, Fisher was a
research scientist at the Center for Science and Technology Policy Research,
humanities advisor to the College of Engineering and Applied Science Dean,
instructor in Engineering Management, and “Embedded Humanist” in a Mechanical
Engineering laboratory. Fisher holds a doctorate
in environmental studies (science policy), a master’s degree in classics
(both from the University of Colorado), and a bachelor’s degree in philosophy
and mathematics (from St. John’s College in Santa Fe and Annapolis).
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