Periodic Reporting for period 4 - MISFIRES (Misfires and Market Innovation: Toward a Collaborative Turn in Organising Markets)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2023-02-01 al 2024-07-31
Conceptually, I engaged with science and technology studies, pragmatic sociology and critical market studies to shift thinking around market organisation and innovation from failure and design to collaboration and experimentation. Healthcare markets offer exemplary sites for this investigation for a number of reasons. The healthcare domain has witnessed strong and long-standing patient movements and activism. Notions of justice and public good in this area are of central societal importance. Severe criticism has been made of the effects of the global Intellectual Property (IP) regime in this area, raising the study of healthcare markets to an economic and political significance beyond any single case. Research has also pointed to the difficulties of market-based experiments such as Medicine Patent Pools to engender systemic changes in medical markets. This raises vital questions of how 'outside' activism may complement 'insider' activism to help create structural market innovation.
The project leveraged a mixed methodological toolkit with ethnographic and participatory methods of inquiry, including digital methods of collaboration and research, to explore how a market’s failures can lead us to markets that are more attentive to and accommodating of the concerns they create. Empirical work was organized through a multiple case study approach, with three exemplary contested markets in healthcare (HIV prophylaxis, Hepatitis C, and the use of DNA data) and three emergent cases (Type 1 Diabetes hacking; Covid19; and Long Covid-ME/CFS) to investigate the activities concerned actors undertake and the repertoires of action they deploy to re-organise these markets.
From an empirical perspective, one fundamental strand of this research was the use of participatory methods of inquiry to include patient advocacy groups and other affected publics as key stakeholders in this project. MISFIRES conducted research by and with affected publics rather than ‘on’ them, and it explored new terrain in how innovative research methods can be used in the development of ‘better’ healthcare markets, for instance through an art-based project with people living with Long Covid and ME/CFS. The aim of this participatory inquiry was to produce, in collaboration with market activists and concerned publics, a collective analysis of the economic, social or moral problems posed by the current market organisation, and subsequently propose and test ways in which these markets could be opened up to alternative configurations. Questions asked include (how) could collaborative tools be used in advancing public reflections on markets? How can researchers help concerned publics move from reflecting to redevising the market, from deliberation to action? What is the role of the participant researcher, academic activist or policy maker in bringing these forums to life or in helping concerned publics get their concerns included in existing forums? Across its substantial body of outputs, the project has provided many significant answers to these questions.
As a direct result of the project, the Lead PI Prof Susi Geiger was appointed as an Expert Member to the World Health Organization Technical Advisory Group on Pharmaceutical Pricing Policies.