People

Alexander Hall

Predoctoral Scholar (Sep 2024–Apr 2028)

Building a Future in Outer Space: Knowledge Control, Institutional Cultures, and Cold War Imagined Technologies

Alex Hall’s project examines U.S. designs during the Cold War for lasting, habitable infrastructure in outer space, including lunar bases and orbital stations. It considers how secrecy, other forms of knowledge control, and differing institutional cultures can affect designs and expectations for technological futures.

Alex asks how control over sensitive knowledge and technologies might determine what is learned or not learned through research and what is considered technologically feasible. What relationship did restricted networks have with open research and popular culture, and what does it mean to call an imagined system “secret” when associated knowledge, ideas, and people also circulate outside it?

Engaging the Science and Technology Studies literatures on secrecy and non-knowledge, this project traces official plans through policy papers, feasibility studies, and other government documents, alongside developments in open networks of research, policy, and advocacy as well as popular culture.

Alex holds a BA in History from the University of Exeter, where he won the dissertation prize for his research on the American space shuttle program. He has also worked as a research assistant in Exeter University’s Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health and holds an MSc in Security Studies from University College London.

Find Alex's profile on the Website of the International Max Planck Research School – "Knowledge and its Resources" (IMPRS-KIR).

Nachrichten & Presse

IMPRS „Knowledge and Its Resources: Historical Reciprocities“ begrüßt seine dritte Kohorte

Mehr