Symposium Overview and Schedule of Events

Sifting and Winnowing Science and Technology Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison: The Holtz Center turns 25

Robert F. and Jean E. Holtz Center for Science and Technology Studies 25th Anniversary Symposium

April 30 and May 1, 2026

Pyle Center

The Center’s 25th anniversary provides a timely opportunity to reflect on the vocabularies and frameworks that can be used to make sense of the current and future social contract of science, technology, higher education and the state more broadly. The symposium will open space for dialogue and debate regarding recent policy and political shifts, and showcase the heterogeneity of perspectives about what STS thinking can bring to science and technology research and development across campus and beyond. 

As the University of Wisconsin-Madison responds to shifts that impact scientific knowledge and technological innovation on campus, the symposium provides an apt moment to reimagine the role of STS research and education. By accounting for the specificities of Wisconsin political history and political culture, we endeavor for the symposium to explore how STS at UW-Madison can meaningfully make sense of shifting relationships between science and democracy as well as science and “the public good.” 

The symposium also offers an occasion to reflect on how individuals and intellectual currents at UW-Madison have grappled with various issues related to science-society dynamics in the past, including decades before the formal establishment of the Holtz Center in 2001. In the past 175 years and especially during the early and mid-20th century, a unique history of knowledge production unfolded in specific parts of UW-Madison that can today be labeled as “proto-STS” or STS-adjacent. Various aspects of thinking and research on campus have at different moments reckoned with the complex relationship between science and society, including in relation to knowledge produced at the university itself. More notably, they have had significant impact not only on public discourses on the role of intellectuals and expert knowledge in democratic society, but also in the formulation of institutional arrangements between universities and state agencies here in Wisconsin and beyond.

Above all, the symposium seeks to highlight the power of STS thinking in providing unique analytical depth regarding the challenges facing higher education as well as science and technology more broadly at the contemporary conjuncture while simultaneously making sense of how this conjuncture itself will affect the future of STS research and education in the UW System and beyond.

April 30, 2026

4:00-5:00 PM

Opening remarks and kick-off panel: The Wisconsin Idea as a STS concept, the longer history of STS at UW-Madison

5:00-6:30 PM

Reception and Awards Ceremony

May 1, 2026

9:00-10:15 AM

Panel 2: Reflections on the history of Holtz Center

10:30-11:45 AM

Panel 3: STS perspectives on contemporary science and research policy

12:00-1:30 PM

Lunch Plenary address by Banu Subramaniam

2:00-3:15 PM

Panel 4: Perspectives on the present and future of STS teaching at UW-Madison

3:30-4:45 PM

Panel 5: The Future of STS at Wisconsin and Beyond

4:45-5:00 PM

Closing remarks

Symposium Program at a Glance

  • Opening remarks and panel followed by reception on April 30, 4:00-6:30 PM
  • Lunch keynote by Prof. Banu Subramaniam on May 1, Noon-1:30 PM
  • Panels on the pasts, presents and futures of STS on May 1, 9 AM-5 PM

For questions about the symposium, please contact Zhe Yu Lee. Email: zlee27@wisc.edu