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Brian Garvey
Researcher at University of Strathclyde
Publications - 24
Citations - 226
Brian Garvey is an academic researcher from University of Strathclyde. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Biology. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 16 publications receiving 171 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Responsible innovation across borders: tensions, paradoxes and possibilities
Phil Macnaghten,Richard Owen,Jack Stilgoe,Brian Wynne,Adalberto Mantovani Martiniano de Azevedo,A. de Campos,Jason Chilvers,Renato Dagnino,G. di Giulio,Emma Frow,Brian Garvey,Chris Groves,Sarah Hartley,Marcelo Knobel,Elizabete Mayumy Kobayashi,Markku Lehtonen,Javier Lezaun,Leonardo Freire de Mello,Marko Synésio Alves Monteiro,J. Pamplona da Costa,C. Rigolin,B. Rondani,Margarita Staykova,Renzo Taddei,Chris Till,David Tyfield,Sara Wilford,Léa Velho +27 more
TL;DR: A group of early career researchers and academics from Sao Paulo state and from the UK met at the University of Campinas to participate in a workshop on "Responsible Innovation and the Governance of socially controversial technologies".
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Migrant workers and the north of Ireland: between neo-liberalism and sectarianism
Brian Garvey,Paul Stewart +1 more
TL;DR: In 1998, the north of Ireland emerged from a protracted civil insurgency sustained by a socio-political infrastructure comprising an expanded Keynesian welfare state and a developing neo-liberal economy.
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Amazonian destruction, Bolsonaro and COVID-19: neo-liberalism unchained
TL;DR: The scale of environmental crimes and aggression towards indigenous peoples and people of African-... as discussed by the authors showed that during the current pandemic, forest loss in 2020 has dwarfed the devastation of the previous year.
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‘Meet the New Boss … Same as the Old boss?’ Technology, toil and tension in the agrofuel frontier
TL;DR: The idea of the "techno-institutional fix" as mentioned in this paper provides a power relation-attentive analysis that invites the further exploration of socially committed alternatives to food and energy production.
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Changing work and the global commodification of ethanol
TL;DR: Palavras-Chave et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the impact of foreign investment in the sugar and ethanol industry in the west of Brazil and found paradoxical changes to work quality and precarity and lead us to question corporate claims of social responsibility.