Key achievements include publications (6 articles already published, 2 accepted and in print, 7 under review and various in preparation). Lucilla Barchetta and Roberta Raffaetà have published an article in the journal 'Big Data & Society' entitled 'Data as environment, environment as data: One Health in collaborative data-intensive science'. One Health considers health as interdependent across humans and non-humans. Its development is thus necessarily interdisciplinary, posing a number of challenges. Increasingly, technology and big data are seen as the solution to these challenges, allowing to aggregate heterogenous data. This article’s argument is that technology does not solve these challenges alone; in dig data times there is ever more need of dialogue across disciplines. We coin the concept of 'data as environment' to illustrate that data are a structure of contact across ecologies and disciplines. We, thus, address the mainstream criticism that data are self-contained bits, enclosed and autonomous objects, extracted and abstracted from the flux of becoming. The article makes a compelling point by unravelling political-ethical questions embedded in the emerging technoscientific worlds of the Anthropocene and of data-intensive science.
For communication, an animated video for the dissemination of the project's main goal and research questions has been developed. In an engaging and simple way, it invites to think at 'the body as a planet and the planet as a body'. Against an anthropocentric perspective, the video asks 'how can we re-think health as a part of an interconnected environment?' The video ends by featuring which kind of interdisciplinary collaboration between anthropologists and microbiome scientists is needed in order to tackle this question.
The project has produced many scientific collaborations. It is strengthening, with colleagues both in Europe and in Italy, the anthropology of science and the anthropology of data within projects of public health. The PI has also established research networks with colleagues in philosophy and social sciences in Europe, positioning the peculiar contribution of anthropology within science and technology studies. With microbiologists, the PI and the team have developed collaborations that have resulted in a seminar on ethics, an interdisciplinary seminar on the microbiome, a project successfully funded, a transdisciplinary laboratory and alleged publication on the social impact of science.