“…Furthermore, such an investigation could usefully draw on the rich sociological and anthropological literature on uncertainty and risk (e.g., Bauman, ; Beck, ; Bonß, ; Callon, Lascoumes, & Barthe, ; Giddens, ). While social historians have started to examine “risk as a category of analysis,” to borrow Peter Itzen's and Simone M. Müller's recent proposal, they are still lagging behind sociologists and anthropologists when it comes to an explicit engagement with uncertainty (Itzen & Müller, , p. 14; for another exception, see Moses & Rosenhaft, ). What makes the works by sociologists and anthropologists so useful, apart from their definition of key terminology, is the convincing case that they have made for uncertainty to be taken as a socially and culturally constructed entity (Bonß, ; Douglas, ; Bonß, ).…”