Professor Joe Deville
LecturerResearch Overview
Joe Deville is a Senior Lecturer based jointly in the Department of Organisation, Work and Technology and the Department of Sociology. His research interests include:
- Scholarly publishing and open access infrastructures
- The everyday, embodied life of debt, credit and finance
- Autonomous systems, methods of algorithmic prediction, futures of credit scoring
- Science and technology studies, speculative sociology, non-representational theory
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Profile
A key area of focus has been Open Access publishing and the politics of scholarly communication. I am particularly interested in researching and building the infrastructures, workflows and communities needed to change how scholarly knowledge circulates.
I am currently exploring these challenges as Principal Investigator of the Open Book Futures project, funded by Arcadia and the Research England Development Fund, and running from May 2023 until April 2026. This project follows directly from the (COPIM) project which ran from November 2019 to April 2023, on which I was a Co-Investigator and which was supported by the same two funders.
In both these projects, the focus has been on ways to deliver a fairer more sustainable future for Open Access book publishing. I became interested in this work as an editor and co-founder of the small Open Access book publisher,
Within the Open Book Futures project, one of my main areas of work is leading and building up the (OBC). It is an independent non-profit which raises funds for book publishers and infrastructure providers deeply committed to Open Access. A key aim is the enable the OBC to be wholly self-sustaining by the end of the Open Book Futures project.
In addition, I am currently working with colleagues to explore how issues of ethics and security become entangled when organisations encounter or prepare to encounter Autonomous Systems. This work is part of the Node, an EPSRC funded project bringing together social scientists and computer scientists. It connects to earlier work on informational mobilities and big data credit scoring.
I have a longstanding interest in the interactions between defaulting debtor and debt collector, which was the subject of my first book , published by Routledge in 2015. There and in other related publications, I sought to simultaneously explore the intimate dimensions of financialised life and their encounter with organisational expertise.
In doing so, I have developed an economic sociology informed by approaches from science and technology studies, speculative philosophy and non-representational theory. I am keen to build up science and technology studies as a field within 51福利, which I work on in my role as Director of the , as well as a member of the Centre for Technological Futures.
I have also co-edited two books: , published by Mattering Press in 2016, and , published by Routledge in 2017.
PhD Supervision Interests
I am looking to supervise students interested in engaging critically with some of the following empirical areas: household economies, everyday indebtedness, AI/data proliferation/informational mobilities, disaster/disaster preparedness, infrastructures of scholarly communication. Theoretically and methodologically I draw influences from fields including science and technology studies, affect theory, economic sociology, and sociologies of the digital.
Selected Publications
Deville, J. 2015 London : Routledge. 212 p. ISBN: 9780415622509.
Book
Deville, J. 2014 In: Consumption, Markets and Culture. 17, 5, p. 468-490. 23 p.
Journal article
Deville, J. 01/2016 In: Consumption, Markets and Culture. 19, 1, p. 38-55. 18 p.
Journal article
Deville, J., Guggenheim, M., Hrdli?ková, Z. 06/2014 In: The Sociological Review. 62, Supp. S1, p. 183-210. 18 p.
Journal article
All Publications
01/05/2023 → 30/04/2026
Research
01/11/2020 → 31/10/2024
Research
01/11/2020 → 31/10/2024
Research
01/11/2019 → 30/04/2023
Research
01/04/2018 → 30/06/2018
Research
17/10/2017 → 30/06/2018
Research
03/02/2014 → 03/06/2014
Other
01/01/2011 → 30/06/2015
Other
01/07/2009 → 01/07/2012
Other
Symposium
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
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Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Invited talk
Invited talk
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Invited talk
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Participation in workshop, seminar, course
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Participation in workshop, seminar, course
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Participation in workshop, seminar, course
Invited talk
Invited talk
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
Centre for Gender Studies
Lancaster Intelligent, Robotic and Autonomous Systems Centre, LIRA - Society and Human Behaviour, Security Lancaster (Sociology)
- CeMoRe - Centre for Mobilities Research
- Centre for Technological Futures
- DSI - Society
- Security Lancaster
- Security Lancaster (Sociology)