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Inside Data Science

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Inside Data Science examines how data scientists defined their professional role and identity, offering an empirically rich and theoretically grounded account of the emergence of a new field.
  • 02 December 2025
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Data scientists appeared suddenly in the early 2010s and quickly became ubiquitous. Institutions, from established corporations to start-ups, universities to government agencies, scrambled to recruit specialists. Somehow, a loose band of computer experts and hackers integrated established technologies and methodologies—and some questionable ideas—into a distinct profession. Where did data science come from, and why did it gain broad recognition?

Inside Data Science examines how data scientists defined their professional role and identity, offering an empirically rich and theoretically grounded account of the emergence of a new field. Philipp Brandt met data science’s early protagonists in New York City’s start-up spaces, coffee shops, and lecture halls, where they displayed a puzzling combination of enthusiasm and uncertainty. At these seemingly casual gatherings, data scientists devised the machinery for seeing the world through datasets while also analyzing the social context of their technical work. Retracing their conversations, Brandt demonstrates how the data scientist role emerged from the collective processing of personal struggles navigating the uncharted space between statistical expertise and coding skills. Offering a novel analytical lens and critical perspective on data science, this book shows how the interplay of personal reflection, technical rigor, and collective scrutiny gave the big-data era, for better or for worse, a human face.

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Price: $140.00
Pages: 368
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 02 December 2025
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9780231214087
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, COMPUTERS / Data Science / General
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This brilliant ethnography captures the emergence of data science. In a theoretically and methodologically sophisticated analysis, it reveals how scattered data hackers constructed an identity as data scientists through reflexive storytelling. This is a must-read that greatly advances our understanding of expertise formation and the emergence of professions.
Philipp Brandt is an assistant professor of sociology at Sciences Po Paris and a researcher at the Centre for the Sociology of Organizations.

Preface
Introduction
1. Encounters
2. The Work
3. Science and Data
4. Interactions
5. Relations
6. Identity
Conclusion
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Methodological Appendix
Notes
Bibliography
Index