Institute of Technology Assessment

The Institute of Technology Assessment (ITA) (German: Institut für Technikfolgen-Abschätzung) is a research unit of the Austrian Academy of Sciences in Vienna.

ITA-Logo, English

The ITA is the only institution in Austria that is fully devoted to technology assessment (TA). The institute organises for many years the internationally renowned annual TA conferences in Vienna[1] and serves as a national and international networking node of the TA community. ITA is a full member of the European Parliamentary Technology Assessment (EPTA) network,[2] is a founding member of the German-speaking Network NTA (Netzwerk Technikfolgenabschätzung)[3] and is, since 2008, a member of the European Technology Assessment Group (ETAG).

History

Founded in 1985 as a working group within the former "Institute for Socio-economic Development Research and Technology Assessment" (Institut für Sozio-ökonomische Entwicklungsforschung und Technikbewertung, ISET), since end of 1987 independent as "Technology Assessment Unit (TAU)" („Forschungsstelle für Technikbewertung“, FTB)); since 1994 an institute (ITA) of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. Its founding director was the physicist prof. Ernest Braun (previously director of the Technology Policy Unit at Aston University in Great Britain). Second director was the economist prof. Gunther Tichy (full professor at the University of Graz and senior researcher at the Austrian Institute of Economic Research[4] in Vienna. Since 2006 Michael Nentwich, law and STS (science and technology studies) scholar, directs the institute. Currently, the institute has approx. 25staff members, among them 20 researchers from the natural and engineering sciences, humanities and social sciences.

Main areas of research

The ITA focuses on the following themes:[5]

ITA recently added a "topics" section describing in plain language the main topics it deals with.[6]

Publications

Some of ITA's publications are published in special series on the publication server of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. The institute serves a publisher. These are the following series:

  • ITA Dossiers: two pages to present research results in non-scientific language with a view to give options for action to politics and society[7]
  • ITA Manu:scripts: academic working-papers[8]
  • ITA Reports: results of research projects[9]
  • NanoTrust Dossiers: short reports, 3-6 pages, with results of the project NanoTrust, that is on health and environmental aspects and societal issues regarding nanotechnologies[10]
gollark: To be honest that seems wildly inefficient.
gollark: <@222424031368970240> `load` and `loadstring` are bad compared to... not dynamically loading/executing code. They're the best ways to do it it you have to.
gollark: Peripherals equipped on a side of a turtle block access to any external peripherals also on that side.
gollark: <@185063952093413376> Yes, though potatOS is primarily tested in emulators.
gollark: Consider making a PR.

References

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