“…Affecting social change requires thinking and knowing differently, they conclude, which in turn requires not just a mere change of narratives, but intervention in, and reconfiguration of, complex ecologies. Law et al's agenda of questioning knowledge in its multifaceted ecology has been taken up across the social sciences, for instance, in debates on digital methodology and the role of Big Data in social research (e.g., Halford & Savage, 2017;Ruppert, 2013;Ruppert et al, 2015); in cultural policy studies, particularly research into the production of regimes of cultural value in public policy (e.g., Campbell, Cox, & O'Brien, 2016;Gilmore, 2014;Miles & Gibson, 2016;D. O'Brien, 2014), and in critical international relations research (e.g., Aradau & Huysmuns, 2014).…”